GRB 221009A
GCN Circular 32635
Subject
GRB 221009A: Swift detected transient may be GRB
Date
2022-10-09T20:44:25Z (3 years ago)
From
Jamie Kennea at Penn State U <jak51@psu.edu>
J. A. Kennea and M. Williams (PSU) report on behalf of the Swift Team:
We provide an update on the BAT trigger 1126853, AKA Swift J1913.1+1946
(GCN #32632). Examination of XRT data from this trigger shows strong
fading. We also note that Fermi/LAT has triggered on the same location.
There is also a possible association with a Fermi/GBM trigger @
13:16:59UT. Given this, we believe that this source is now likely a
Gamma-Ray Burst and not a Galactic Transient. If the GBM trigger is the
same source, this would suggest a highly energetic outburst, and therefore
we strongly encourage follow-up of this usual event.
GCN Circular 32636
Subject
GRB 221009A: Fermi GBM detection of an extraordinarily bright GRB
Date
2022-10-09T20:54:36Z (3 years ago)
From
Peter Veres at UAH <veresp@gmail.com>
P. Veres (UAH), E. Burns (LSU), E. Bissaldi (Politecnico and INFN
Bari), S. Lesage (UAH), O. Roberts (USRA)
report on behalf of the Fermi GBM Team:
"At 2022-10-09 13:16:59.000 UT on 9 October 2022, the Fermi Gamma-Ray
Burst Monitor (GBM) triggered and located GRB 221009A (trigger
687014224 / 221009553).
This event, if it is a GRB, it is the brightest among the GBM detected
GRBs. If it is not a GRB then it is a rare transient event. Follow-up
across all wavelengths is encouraged.
The on-ground calculated location, using the GBM trigger
data, is RA = 290.4, DEC = 22.3 (J2000 degrees,
equivalent to 19 h 22 m, 22 d 15 '), with a statistical uncertainty
of 1 degrees (radius, 1-sigma containment,
statistical only; there is additionally a systematic
error which we have characterized as a core-plus-tail model, with 90% of
GRBs having a 3.7 deg error and a small tail suffering a larger than 10 deg
systematic error. [Connaughton et al. 2015, ApJS, 216, 32] ).
This location is consistent with the Swift J1913.1+1946 localization
(Dichiara et al. GCN 32632) though it precedes the Swift trigger by
an hour.
The angle from the Fermi LAT boresight at the GBM trigger time is 76 degrees.
The GBM light curve consists of an initial ~10 s long pulse, followed
by an extraordinarily bright episode at ~180 s after the trigger time,
lasting at least 100 seconds.
The analysis results presented above are preliminary;
final results will be published in the GBM GRB Catalog:
https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/W3Browse/fermi/fermigbrst.html
For Fermi GBM data and info, please visit the official Fermi GBM Support Page:
https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/data/access/gbm/"
GCN Circular 32637
Subject
GRB 221009A or Swift J1913.1+1946: Fermi-LAT detection
Date
2022-10-09T21:45:05Z (3 years ago)
From
Elisabetta Bissaldi at INFN,Bari <elisabetta.bissaldi@ba.infn.it>
E Bissaldi (Politecnico and INFN Bari), N. Omodei (Stanford Univ.),
M. Kerr (NRL), report on behalf of the Fermi-LAT team:
At 14:17:05.99 on October, 09, 2022 Fermi-LAT detected high-energy emission
from Swift J1913.1+1946 or GRB 221009A, which was reported by
Swift (Dichiara et al. GCN #32632) and by GBM (Veres et al. GCN #32636).
The best LAT on-ground location is found to be
RA, Dec = 288.21, 19.73 (J2000)
with an error radius of 0.09 deg (90 % containment, statistical error only).
This was 94 deg from the LAT boresight at the time of the trigger.
The data from the Fermi-LAT show a significant increase in the event rate
that is spatially and temporally correlated with the trigger with high significance.
The 100 MeV - 1 GeV photon flux in the time interval 500-3500 s after
the Swift trigger is (1.27 +/- 0.16)E-05 ph/cm2/s.
The estimated photon index above 100 MeV is -2.12 +/- 0.11.
The highest-energy photon is a 7.8 GeV
which is observed 766 seconds after the Swift trigger.
The Fermi-LAT point of contact for this burst is
Elisabetta Bissaldi (elisabetta.bissaldi@ba.infn.it).
The Fermi-LAT is a pair conversion telescope designed to
cover the energy band from 20 MeV to greater than 300 GeV.
It is the product of an international collaboration
between NASA and DOE in the U.S. and many scientific
institutions across France, Italy, Japan and Sweden.
GCN Circular 32641
Subject
IPN triangulation of extremely bright GRB 221009A
Date
2022-10-10T01:10:40Z (3 years ago)
From
Dmitry Svinkin at Ioffe Institute <svinkin@mail.ioffe.ru>
D. Svinkin, D. Frederiks, A. Ridnaia, A. Lysenko,
and T. Cline on behalf of the Konus-Wind team,
A. Goldstein, M. S. Briggs, C. Wilson-Hodge,
and E. Burns on behalf of the Fermi GBM team,
E. Bozzo and C. Ferrigno, on behalf of the INTEGRAL SPI-ACS GRB team,
and
S. Barthelmy, J. Cummings, H. Krimm, D. Palmer, and A. Tohuvavohu
on behalf of the Swift-BAT team, report:
The extremely bright, long-duration GRB 221009A
(Swift-BAT detection of Swift J1913.1+1946:
Dichiara et al., GCN Circ. 32632; Kennea and Williams, GCN Circ. 32635;
Fermi-GBM detection: Veres et al., GCN Circ. 32636;
Fermi-LAT detection: Bissaldi et al., GCN Circ. 32636)
has been detected by Fermi (GBM trigger 687014224),
INTEGRAL (SPI-ACS), and Konus-Wind, so far,
at about 47820 s UT (13:17:00).
We have triangulated it to a Konus-GBN annulus centered at
RA(2000)=1.444 deg (00h 05m 47s) Dec(2000)=+3.590 deg (+3d 35' 25")
whose radius is 73.473 +/- 4.089 deg (3 sigma).
This localization may be improved.
The IPN localization is consistent with, but reduces the area of, the
Fermi-GBM one (glg_healpix_all_bn221009553_v01).
The IPN localization is consistent with Swift-BAT (GCN 32632) and
Fermi-LAT (GCN 32636) position of Swift J1913.1+1946, supporting that
Swift J1913.1+1946 is the afterglow of GRB 221009A.
A triangulation map is posted at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB221009_T47819/IPN/
The Konus-Wind time history and spectrum will be given
in a forthcoming GCN Circular.
GCN Circular 32642
Subject
GRB 221009A: Fermi GBM observation
Date
2022-10-10T04:04:41Z (3 years ago)
From
Stephen Lesage at Fermi-GBM Team <sjl0014@uah.edu>
S. Lesage (UAH), P. Veres (UAH), O.J. Roberts (USRA),
E. Burns (LSU), and E. Bissaldi (Politecnico and INFN Bari)
report on behalf of the Fermi GBM Team:
"At 13:16:59.99 UT on 09 October 2022, the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
triggered and located GRB 221009A (trigger 687014224/221009553) which
was also detected by Swift-BAT (S. Dichiara, et al. 2022, GCN 32632;
J. A. Kennea, et al. 2022, GCN 32635), Fermi-LAT (E. Bissaldi et al. 2022,
GCN 32637), INTEGRAL (SPI-ACS), Konus-Wind, and triangulated by IPN
(D. Svinkin et al. 2022, GCN 32641). The GBM on-ground location (GCN 32636)
is
consistent with the Swift-BAT and Fermi-LAT locations and the IPN
localization.
The angle from the Fermi LAT boresight is 73 degrees.
The GBM light curve consists of two emission episodes, a single isolated
peak
followed by a longer, extremely bright, multi-pulsed emission episode with
a duration (T90) of about 327 s (10-1000 keV).
The time-averaged spectrum for the first emission episode
from T0-0.0 to T0+43.4 s is best fit by
a power law function with an exponential high-energy cutoff.
The power law index is -1.70 +/- 0.02 and the cutoff energy,
parameterized as Epeak, is 375 +/- 87 keV.
The event fluence (10-1000 keV) in this time interval is
(2.12 +/- 0.05)E-05 erg/cm^2.
Due to the brightness of the second emission episode, the likelihood of
pulse pile-up and other systematic effects are very high and no single
spectral model provides an adequate fit in this preliminary analysis.
The event fluence (10-1000 keV) from T0+175 to T0+1458 s
is on the order of (2.912 +/- 0.001)E-02 erg/cm^2.
The 1.024 sec peak photon flux measured
starting from T0+238.8 s in the 10-1000 keV band
is on the order of 2385 +/- 3 ph/s/cm^2,
making this the most intense and fluent GRB detected by Fermi GBM.
Further analysis is being performed.
The spectral analysis results presented above are preliminary;
final results will be published in the GBM GRB Catalog:
https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/W3Browse/fermi/fermigbrst.html
For Fermi GBM data and info, please visit the official Fermi GBM Support
Page:
https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/data/access/gbm/"
GCN Circular 32644
Subject
GRB 221009A BOOTES-2/TELMA and OSN optical detections
Date
2022-10-10T07:40:13Z (3 years ago)
From
Youdong HU at IAA-CSIC <huyoudong072@hotmail.com>
Y.-D. Hu, V. Casanova, E. Fernandez-Garcia, M. A. Castro Tirado, M.D. Caballero-Garcia, I. Olivares, I. Perez-Garcia and R. Sanchez-Ramirez and A. J. Castro-Tirado (IAA-CSIC), C. Perez del Pulgar and A. Castellon (Univ. de Malaga), R. Fernandez-Munoz (IHSM/UMA-CSIC) and M. Jelinek (ASU-CAS), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
The 60cm BOOTES-2/TELMA robotic telescope at IHSM La Mayora (UMA-CSIC) in Algarrobo Costa (Malaga, Spain) responded to the extraordinarily bright GRB 221009A detected by Swift, Fermi, MAXI/GSC, INTEGRAL (SPI-ACS), Konus-Wind, and the IPN (Dichiara et al. GCNC 32632, Veres et al. GCNC 32636, Bissaldi et al. GCNC 32637, Svinkin et al. GCNC 32641, Negoro et al. ATEL 15651). A number of images (60s exposures in clear filter) were taken starting at 18:23 UT on 9 Oct (~ 4.2 hours after trigger). Due to passing clouds, the optical afterglow was only detected in frames around 18:44 UT with 16.21+/-0.11 mag.
Later on, we triggered the 0.9m telescope of the Observatiorio Sierra Nevada (OSN) near Granada, Spain. Observations started on 9 Oct 18:45 UT (~ 4.6 hours after trigger) in BVRI-bands (90 s exposures each). The optical afterglow is clearly detected with R=16.57+-0.02 mag on the first R-band image (gathered at 18:49 UT).
These detections are consistent with the ones reported by Lipunov et al. (GCNC 32634), Perley et al. (GCNC 32638) and Broens et al. (GCNC 32640). Further observations are ongoing.
We thank both the staff at La Mayora and OSN for their excellent support.
GCN Circular 32645
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): Mondy optical observations
Date
2022-10-10T08:10:47Z (3 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
S. Belkin (IKI, HSE), A. Pozanenko (IKI), E. Klunko (ISTP), N. Pankov
(HSE) report on behalf of GRB IKI FuN:
We observed GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946) (Swift-BAT detection of
Swift J1913.1+1946: Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Kennea and Williams, GCN
32635; Fermi-GBM detection: Veres et al., GCN 32636; Fermi-LAT
detection: Bissaldi et al., GCN 32636, IPN localization: Svinkin et
al., GCN 32641) with AZT-33IK telescope of Sayan observatory (Mondy)
starting on 2022-10-09 (UT) 14:26:54 and continuing to 15:34:05.
We clearly detect the optical afterglow (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632;
Lipunov et al., GCN 32634; Perley GCN 32638; Hu et al., GCN 32644).
Preliminary photometry of the afterglow at the first image is following
Date UT start t-T0 Filter Exp. OT Err. UL(3sigma)
(mid, days) (s)
2022-10-09 14:26:54 0.01223 R 120 14.84 0.09 20.8
We observe a monotonic decay in brightness, which can be approximated by
a power law with an index of -0.52.
The photometry is based on the nearby USNO-B1.0 stars (R2)
GCN Circular 32646
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): MeerLICHT observations
Date
2022-10-10T09:14:47Z (3 years ago)
From
Simon de Wet at UCT <dwtsim002@myuct.ac.za>
S. de Wet (UCT), P.J. Groot (Radboud/UCT/SAAO) report on behalf of the
MeerLICHT consortium:
Following the detection by Swift of a bright hard new X-ray and optical
transient (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632), the 0.6m wide-field MeerLICHT
telescope, located at Sutherland, South Africa, started automatic
observations of the BAT error box beginning at 17:49:44 UT on 2022 October
9. Observations consisted of 60s exposures in the q,u,g,r,i,z bands
following the sequence quqgqrqiqz and continued for approximately 1 hour.
Some of our observations were affected by cirrus clouds.
We detect a source at the Swift/UVOT position (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632)
consistent with other optical detections (Lipunov et al., GCN 32634; Perley
et al., GCN 32638; Broens, GCN 32640), and report the following 3-sigma
u-band upper limit and detections in the AB magnitude system:
u > 17.91 at 18:06:27 UT
g = 18.22 +/- 0.33 at 18:21:07 UT
q = 17.19 +/- 0.07 at 18:05:00 UT
r = 17.76 +/- 0.08 at 18:23:59 UT
i = 15.58 +/- 0.03 at 18:26:56 UT
z = 14.89 +/- 0.03 at 18:29:55 UT
MeerLICHT is built and run by a consortium consisting of Radboud
University, University of Cape Town, the South African Astronomical
Observatory, the University of Oxford, the University of Manchester and the
University of Amsterdam.
GCN Circular 32647
Subject
GRB 221009A: Nanshan/NEXT photometry and Xinglong-2.16m spectroscopy
Date
2022-10-10T09:19:26Z (3 years ago)
From
Dong Xu at NAOC/CAS <dxu@nao.cas.cn>
D. Xu, S.Q. Jiang, S.Y. Fu, X. Liu (NAOC), Z.P. Zhu (NAOC, HUST), T.H.
Lu (NAOC), X. Gao (Urumqi No.1 Senior High School), J.Z. Liu (XAO) report:
We observed the field of the optical counterpart of Swift J1913.1+1946
or GRB 221009A detected by Swift (Dichiara, GCN 32632), using the
NEXT-0.6m telescope located at Nanshan, Xinjiang, China. Observations
started at 14:25:55 UT on 2022-10-09, i.e., 762 s after the Swift/BAT
trigger. A series of frames in the Sloan r- and z- filters were obtained.
The optical counterpart is clearly detected in each of our images, which
decays from r ~ 14.93 to r ~ 16.50 within ~ four hours, with a decay
index of \alpha ~ 0.5 (F_t ~ t^-\alpha), calibrated the nearby PS1
stars. The decaying behavior is consistent with that for conventional
GRBs.
Spectroscopy of the optical counterpart was performed at the 2.16m
telescope equipped with the BFOSC camera at Xinglong, Hebei, China. The
spectrum covers the wavelength range 3800-9000 AA. The observation mid
time is 2022 Oct 10.63 UT, i.e., 0.95 hr after the BAT trigger.
The spectrum is dominated by a red continuum due to very high Galactic
extinction, and no prominent absorption feature can be identified. Given
the detections by Swift/UVOT as well as spectral continuum, the event
could be real GRB 221009A at a rather low redshift.
We thank the great support of the Xinglong-2.16m staff, in particular
Junjun Jia, Min He, Aiying Zhou, and Jie Zheng.
GCN Circular 32648
Subject
GRB 221009A: Redshift from X-shooter/VLT
Date
2022-10-10T09:39:41Z (3 years ago)
From
Antonio de Ugarte Postigo at OCA <deugarte@oca.eu>
A. de Ugarte Postigo (OCA), L. Izzo (DARK/NBI), G. Pugliese
(Amsterdam Univ. and Leiden Observatory), D. Xu (NAOC),
B. Schneider (CEA Paris-Saclay), J.P.U. Fynbo (DAWN/NBI),
N.R. Tanvir (Univ. Leicester), D.B. Malesani (Radboud Univ.
and DAWN/NBI), A. Saccardi (GEPI, Observatoire de Paris),
D. A. Kann (Goethe Univ.), K. Wiersema (Lancaster Univ.),
B. P. Gompertz (Birmingham), C. C. Thoene (ASU-CAS) and
A. J. Levan (Radboud Univ.) report on behalf of the Stargate
collaboration:
We observed the afterglow of the extremely bright GRB221009A
(Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635;
Bissaldi et al., GCN 32637; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Lesage et
al., GCN 32642) with X-shooter at ESO's UT3 of the Very Large
Telescope (Paranal, Chile). The observations started at
00:49:58.9 UT (11.55 hr after the GBM trigger and 10.66 hr
after the BAT trigger). The observation consisted of 4x600s with
a spectral coverage between 3000 and 21000 AA.
We detect a very red continuum with absorption features that
correspond to CaII, CaI and NaID at a redshift of z = 0.151. We
also detect multiple features due to the Milky Way���s interstellar
medium, due to the large Galactic column density of material
along this line of sight. At this redshift the event has an isotropic
equivalent energy of Eiso=2x10^54 erg (using the GBM fluence
reported in GCN 32642), barring saturation effects in the
Fermi/GBM fluence. This is within the upper end of GRB
energetics. Further follow-up is strongly encouraged.
We acknowledge the excellent support provided by the Paranal
staff, in particular A. Escorza and Zahed Wahhaj.
GCN Circular 32650
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): AGILE/MCAL detection
Date
2022-10-10T10:50:44Z (3 years ago)
From
Alessandro Ursi at INAF/IAPS <alessandro.ursi@gmail.com>
A. Ursi (INAF/IAPS), G. Panebianco (INAF/OAS-Bologna), C. Pittori, F.
Verrecchia (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), F. Longo (Univ. Trieste and INFN Trieste),
N. Parmiggiani (INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Tavani (INAF/IAPS, and Univ. Roma Tor
Vergata), A. Argan, M. Cardillo, C. Casentini, Y. Evangelista, L. Foffano,
E. Menegoni, G. Piano (INAF/IAPS), F. Lucarelli (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), A.
Addis, L. Baroncelli, A. Bulgarelli, A. Di Piano, V. Fioretti, F. Fuschino
(INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Romani (INAF/OA-Brera), M. Marisaldi
(INAF/OAS-Bologna, and Bergen University), M. Pilia, A. Trois
(INAF/OA-Cagliari), I. Donnarumma (ASI), A. Giuliani (INAF/IASF-Mi), and P.
Tempesta (TeleSpazio), report on behalf of the AGILE Team:
The AGILE satellite detected the bright emission classified as GRB 221009A
or Swift J1913.1+1946, reported by Swift BAT (GCN #32635) at T0 =
2022-10-09 13:16:59 (UTC), by Fermi GBM (GCNs # 32636, #31782), Fermi LAT
(GCN #32637), and IPN (GCN #32641).
The burst is clearly visible in the AGILE scientific ratemeters of the
MiniCALorimeter detector (MCAL; 0.4-100 MeV) and in all the five panels of
the AntiCoincidence system (AC Top, 50-200 keV; AC Lat, 80-200 keV). The
event consisted of several episodes, exhibiting an entire duration of about
600 s. The first episode lasted about 10 s and it released a total number
of 13870 counts in the MCAL detector (above a background rate of 1130 Hz),
and 31880 counts in the AC Top detector (above a background rate of 2980
Hz). The central episodes released a very large fluence, which produced
saturation effects in both MCAL and AC count rates, preventing a reliable
evaluation of the integrated counts. The last episode lasted 73 s and
released a total number of 517170 counts in the AC Top detector (above a
background rate of 2755 Hz). The AGILE ratemeter light curves can be found
at http://www.agilescienceapp.it/notices/GRB221009A_AGILE_RM.png .
The event also triggered two partial high time resolution MCAL data
acquisitions, covering the onset of the central episodes. The
time-integrated spectrum of the first trigger, from T0+181.00 s to
T0+194.03 s, can be fitted in the energy range 0.5-5 MeV with a power-law
with ph.ind. = -2.07 (-0.04,+0.04), resulting in a reduced chi-squared of
1.98 (32 d.o.f.) and a fluence of 5.88e-04 erg/cm^2 (90% confidence level),
in the same energy range. Due to the extremely high fluence, the second
trigger is affected by pile-up and count rate saturation, preventing a
reliable evaluation of the corresponding energy spectrum. The MCAL light
curve can be found at
http://www.agilescienceapp.it/notices/GRB221009A_080412_592406219.000000.png
.
At the T0, the event was 100 deg off-axis.
Additional analysis of AGILE data is in progress. Automatic MCAL GRB alert
Notices can be found at: https://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/agile_mcal.html.
GCN Circular 32651
Subject
GRB 221009A: Swift-XRT refined Analysis
Date
2022-10-10T11:19:36Z (3 years ago)
From
Phil Evans at U of Leicester <pae9@leicester.ac.uk>
J.A. Kennea (PSU), A. Tohuvavohu (U. Toronto), J.P. Osborne (U.
Leicester), K.L. Page (U. Leicester), A.P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), A.
Melandri (INAF-OAB), T. Sbarrato (INAF-OAB), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB),
D.N. Burrows (PSU) and E Bissaldi report on behalf of the Swift-XRT
team:
We have analysed 12 ks of XRT data for GRB 221009A (E Bissaldi et al.
GCN Circ. 32637), from 159 s to 58.4 ks after the BAT trigger. The
data are entirely in Windowed Timing (WT) mode (the first 10 s were
taken while Swift was slewing). A spectrum formed from the WT mode data
can be fitted with an absorbed power-law with a photon spectral index
of 1.836 (+0.012, -0.011). The best-fitting absorption column is 6.76
(+/-0.16) x 10^21 cm^-2, at a redshift of 0.151, in addition to the
Galactic value of 5.4 x 10^21 cm^-2 (Willingale et al. 2013). The
counts to observed (unabsorbed) 0.3-10 keV flux conversion factor
deduced from this spectrum is 5.7 x 10^-11 (1.0 x 10^-10) erg cm^-2
count^-1.
A summary of the WT-mode spectrum is thus:
Galactic foreground: 5.4 x 10^21 cm^-2
Intrinsic column: 6.76 (+/-0.16) x 10^21 cm^-2 at z=0.151
Photon index: 1.836 (+0.012, -0.011)
The results of the XRT-team automatic analysis are available at
http://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_products/01126853.
This circular is an official product of the Swift-XRT team.
GCN Circular 32652
Subject
GRB 221009A: REM optical and NIR detection of the afterglow
Date
2022-10-10T11:22:17Z (3 years ago)
From
Paolo D'Avanzo at INAF-OAB <pda.davanzo@gmail.com>
R. Brivio, M. Ferro, P. D'Avanzo, D. Fugazza (INAF-OAB), A. Melandri (INAF-OAR), S. Covino (INAF-OAB)
on behalf of the REM team, report:
We observed the field of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635; Veres et al.,
GCN 32636; Bissaldi et al., GCN 32637; Svinkin et al., GCN 32641; Ursi et al., GCN Circ. 32650) with the REM
60cm robotic telescope located at the ESO premise of La Silla (Chile). The observations were carried in the
g, r, i, z, J, H and K bands, starting on 2022 Oct 09 at 23:43:02 UT (i.e. about 10.43 hours after the GBM trigger)
and lasted for about 1 hour.
The optical and NIR afterglow is detected in all bands. From preliminary photometry, we derive the following magnitudes:
r = 17.36 +/- 0.12
(AB; calibrated against the the Pan-STARRS catalogue)
H = 12.21 +/- 0.04
(Vega; calibrated against the 2MASS catalogue)
at a mid time of t-t0 ~ 10.47 hours after the GBM trigger.
GCN Circular 32653
Subject
GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: AMI-LA observations
Date
2022-10-10T12:10:49Z (3 years ago)
From
Lauren Rhodes at Oxford <lauren.rhodes@physics.ox.ac.uk>
Joe Bright, Lauren Rhodes, Rob Fender (University of Oxford), Wael Farah, Alex Pollak, Andrew Siemion (SETI Institute) report:
We observed the field of the candidate gamma-ray burst GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946; ATel #15650, ATel #15651) with the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager Large-Array (AMI-LA) at 15.5 GHz beginning at UT 16:25:25.5 on 09-Oct-2022 (approximately 2 hours 15 minutes after the initial BAT trigger reported in ATel #15650) for a total of 4 hours. The flux standard 3c286 was used to calibrate the bandpass response and flux scale of the AMI-LA and J1925+2106 was used as an interleaved complex gain calibrator.
We detect a bright unresolved source at a position consistent with the one reported in ATel #15651 at a (preliminary) flux density of 39 +/- 2 mJy (including both a statistical uncertainty and a 5% absolute flux scale uncertainty). There is no significant emission at this position in either the VLA Sky Survey (VLASS; Lacy+2020) or the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS; Condon+1998), and so we identify this new source as the radio counterpart to GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946. Further observations are planned.
We thank the staff at the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory for carrying out these observations and operating the AMI-LA.
GCN Circular 32654
Subject
GRB 221009A or Swift J1913.1+1946: PRIME near-infrared detection
Date
2022-10-10T12:15:59Z (3 years ago)
From
Igor Andreoni at JSI <igor.andreoni@gmail.com>
J. M. Durbak (UMD), A. S. Kutyrev (NASA/GSFC), I. Andreoni (JSI), K. De
(MIT), E. Troja (U Tor Vergata/ASU), S. B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), R. Hamada
(Osaka U), Y. Hirao (Osaka U), R. Kirikawa (Osaka U), I. Kondo (Osaka U),
S. Miyazaki (ISAS/JAXA), G. Mosby (NASA/GSFC), T. Sumi (Osaka U), D. Suzuki
(Osaka U), H. Yama (Osaka U)
We observed the field of the transient Swift J1913.1+1946 or GRB 221009A
(Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635; Veres et al.,
GCN 32636; Bissaldi et al., GCN 32637; Svinkin et al., GCN 32641; Ursi et
al., GCN Circ. 32650) with the PRIME near-infrared camera mounted on the
1.8m Telescope at SAAO.
Observations were carried out on 2022-10-09 around 18:50 UT, i.e. about 4.7
hours from the Swift/BAT detection (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632), 5.5 hours
after the Fermi/GBM detection (Veres et al., GCN 32636), and 1 day after
the PRIME instrument first light.
We detected a near-infrared source spatially consistent with the bright
optical transient previously reported, with preliminary photometry H~12.2
mag, calibrated against nearby 2MASS sources. Our result is consistent with
the REM detection (Brivio et al. GCN 32652) and suggests no significant
fading between 5.5 hr and 10.5 hr after the GBM trigger.
Archival deep near-infrared images of the field taken with WFCAM during the
UKIRT Galactic plane survey (Lawrence et al., 2007) do not show any
persistent source in J and H bands at the transient location.
These results are based on data obtained from PRIME at the South African
Astronomical Observatory (SAAO), Sutherland, South Africa.
GCN Circular 32655
Subject
GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: ATA follow-up observations
Date
2022-10-10T12:32:57Z (3 years ago)
From
Lauren Rhodes at Oxford <lauren.rhodes@physics.ox.ac.uk>
Wael Farah (SETI Institute), Joe Bright (University of Oxford), Alex Pollak, Andrew Siemion (SETI Institute), David DeBoer (UC Berkeley), Rob Fender, Lauren Rhodes, Ian Heywood (University of Oxford) report:
After the detection of a bright radio counterpart to GRB221009A at 15.5 GHz was reported in ATel #15653 /GCN #32653, we conducted follow-up observations with the Allen Telescope Array (ATA) at 1.5, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 GHz. Observations were carried out simultaneously at 1.5 + 3, 4 + 6 and 8 + 10 GHz, with a 672 MHz bandwidth centered on each frequency, using a newly deployed wideband correlator (Farah et al., in prep.), at spectral and temporal resolution of 0.5MHz and 10s, respectively. The target field was observed for 1 hour per pair of frequencies. The primary flux standard 3c286 was used to calibrate the absolute flux scale and bandpass response of the array, and J1925+2106 was used to calibrate the time dependent complex gains. Data flagging was performed with AOFlagger (Offringa+2012) while calibration and imaging were performed using standard techniques in CASA (McMullin+2007).
We clearly detect an unresolved radio source at a position consistent with the one reported in ATel #15650 at 1.5, 3, 6, 8, and 10 GHz. Preliminary flux densities at 3, 6, 8, and 10 GHz are reported below, and include a 10% absolute flux scale uncertainty in addition to the statistical error from the fit. Observations conducted at 4 GHz were severely corrupted by radio frequency interference and were not processed. Our observations indicate that the radio counterpart to GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 is self-absorbed below around 10 GHz, although there is apparently significant flux density evolution between observing epochs.
MJD Frequency (GHz) Flux density (mJy)
59862.0492 3.0 3.6 +/- 0.7
59861.9414 6.0 9.0 +/- 1
59862.1242 8.0 28 +/- 3
59862.1242 10.0 38 +/- 4
The Allen Telescope Array is a 42-element radio interferometer located at the Hat Creek Radio Observatory in Northern California. The facility is fully operated by the SETI Institute.
GCN Circular 32657
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): AGILE/GRID detection
Date
2022-10-10T12:49:03Z (3 years ago)
From
Alessandro Ursi at INAF/IAPS <alessandro.ursi@gmail.com>
G. Piano (INAF/IAPS), F. Verrecchia (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), A. Bulgarelli
(INAF/OAS-Bologna), A. Ursi (INAF/IAPS), G. Panebianco (INAF/OAS-Bologna),
C. Pittori, (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), F. Longo (Univ. Trieste and INFN
Trieste), N. Parmiggiani (INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Tavani (INAF/IAPS, and
Univ. Roma Tor Vergata), A. Argan, M. Cardillo, C. Casentini, Y.
Evangelista, L. Foffano, E. Menegoni, (INAF/IAPS), F. Lucarelli (SSDC, and
INAF/OAR), A. Addis, L. Baroncelli, A. Di Piano, V. Fioretti, F. Fuschino
(INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Romani (INAF/OA-Brera), M. Marisaldi
(INAF/OAS-Bologna, and Bergen University), M. Pilia, A. Trois
(INAF/OA-Cagliari), I. Donnarumma (ASI), A. Giuliani (INAF/IASF-Mi), and P.
Tempesta (TeleSpazio), report on behalf of the AGILE Team:
The GRID detector onboard the AGILE satellite detected the bright emission
classified as GRB 221009A or Swift J1913.1+1946, reported by Swift BAT (GCN
#32635) at T0 = 2022-10-09 13:16:59 (UTC), by Fermi GBM (GCNs # 32636,
#31782), Fermi LAT (GCN #32637), IPN (GCN #32641), AGILE/MCAL (GCN #32650),
Swift XRT (GCN #32651), and Swift UVOT (GCN #32656).
Integrating from 2022-10-09 UT 13:16:59 (T0) to 2022-10-09 UT 14:16:59 (T0
+ 1h), a preliminary multi-source likelihood analysis yields a detection
with a significance of 42 sigma and a gamma-ray flux F(>100 MeV) = (1.11
+/- 0.08) x 10^-3 photons/cm^2/s, by adopting a power-law model with a
(reference) photon index value of -2.1.
The angular position of the gamma-ray event, as detected by the AGILE/GRID,
is:
(l, b) = (52.99, 4.26) +/- 0.17 deg (stat.) +/- 0.10 deg (syst.)
These measurements were obtained with AGILE observing a large portion of
the sky in spinning mode. Additional analysis of AGILE data is in progress.
GCN Circular 32658
Subject
GRB 221009A: Fermi-LAT refined analysis
Date
2022-10-10T13:42:46Z (3 years ago)
From
Roberta Pillera at Politecnico and INFN Bari <roberta.pillera@ba.infn.it>
GRB 221009A: Fermi-LAT refined analysis
R. Pillera (Politecnico and INFN Bari), E Bissaldi (Politecnico and INFN
Bari),
N. Omodei (Stanford Univ.), G. La Mura (LIP, Portugal),
F. Longo (University and INFN Trieste) report on behalf of the Fermi-LAT
team:
We report updated observations of GRB 221009A which was detected by
Swift (Kennea et al. GCN #32635), Fermi-GBM (Veres et al. GCN #32636,
Lesage et al. GCN #32642), Fermi-LAT (Bissaldi et al. GCN #32637),
and the IPN (Svinkin et al. GCN #32641).
GRB 221009A triggered Fermi-GBM on October 10, 2022, at 13:16:59.99 UT
(trigger 687014224/221009553), about 1 hour earlier with respect
to the Swift trigger, which was reported as a new bright
hard X-ray and optical transient and tentatively classified
as Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632).
Prompt GCN notices from Fermi-GBM were not distributed
due to problems with the real-time downlink from TDRS,
therefore no automatic Fermi-LAT GRB pipelines were triggered
by the GBM event.
Using LAT events with E>100 MeV between T0+200 s and T0+800 s,
we find a LAT localization of
RA = 288.282, Dec = 19.495,
with a 90% containment radius of 0.027 degrees (statistical only).
The LAT lightcurve shows a bright structured emission episode
which is temporally coincident with the GBM main emission episode
starting at T0+200s.
The 100 MeV - 1 GeV photon flux in the time interval 200-800 s after
the GBM trigger is (6.2 +/- 0.4)E-03 ph/cm2/s.
The estimated photon index above 100 MeV is -1.87 +/- 0.04.
From a preliminary analysis, the LAT emission
is extending for about 25ks post GBM trigger.
The highest-energy photon is 99.3 GeV (with a probability of 99.2%)
which is observed 240 seconds after the GBM trigger.
This represents the highest GRB photon energy
ever detected by Fermi-LAT (the previous record holder being
a 95 GeV event from GRB 130427A).
The Fermi-LAT point of contact for this burst is
Elisabetta Bissaldi (elisabetta.bissaldi@ba.infn.it).
The Fermi-LAT is a pair conversion telescope designed to
cover the energy band from 20 MeV to greater than 300 GeV.
It is the product of an international collaboration
between NASA and DOE in the U.S. and many scientific
institutions across France, Italy, Japan and Sweden.
GCN Circular 32659
Subject
GRB 221009A: Multi-color detection of the optical
Date
2022-10-10T14:16:00Z (3 years ago)
From
Gregory SungHak Paek at SNU <shpaek@astro.snu.ac.kr>
Gregory S.H. Paek (SNU ARC/SNU), Myungshin Im (SNU ARC/SNU), Yuji Urata
(NCU), Hyun-Il Sung (KASI) on behalf of a larger collaboration
We detected the optical counterpart/NIR afterglow of extremely bright GRB
221009A (Dichiara et al., GCN #32632) with the 1-m class telescopes in
Lemonsan Optical Astronomy Observatory (LOAO) facilities of the GW
EM-Counterpart Korean Observatory (GECKO).
We observed the center of UVOT localization (RA, Dec = 288.265, +19.774)
+15 hours after the report in B, V, R, I, z, and Y-bands. We clearly
detected the afterglow in all V, R, I, z, and Y-bands except for the
B-band. We calibrated flux with the PANSTARRS catalog and used an AB
magnitude system. Depth means 5 sigma upper limit for a point source
detection. The magnitudes are not corrected for galactic extinction.
------------------- ----------- ----------- ------ ----------- ----------
----- ------ -----
DATE-OBS[UTC] JD t-t0[days] FILTER Observatory EXPTIME[s]
MAG MAGERR DEPTH
------------------- ----------- ----------- ------ ----------- ----------
----- ------ -----
2022-10-10T04:18:54 2459862.680 0.626 B LOAO 60s*5
None None 19.66
2022-10-10T04:20:38 2459862.681 0.628 V LOAO 60s*5
18.74 0.13 19.48
2022-10-10T04:22:04 2459862.682 0.629 R LOAO 60s*5
17.55 0.06 19.75
2022-10-10T04:23:31 2459862.683 0.630 I LOAO 60s*5
16.41 0.05 19.56
2022-10-10T04:24:39 2459862.684 0.631 z LOAO 60s*5
TBD TBD TBD
2022-10-10T04:25:58 2459862.685 0.631 Y LOAO 60s*5
TBD TBD TBD
We will continue the follow-up observation for this target with the LOAO,
and other GECKO facilities in Australia, and Chile. Gravitational-wave EM
Counterpart Korean Observatory (GECKO) is a network of 10+ 0.5m to 1m class
telescopes worldwide.
GCN Circular 32660
Subject
GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: INTEGRAL SPI/ACS observations
Date
2022-10-10T14:52:36Z (3 years ago)
From
Diego Gotz at CEA <diego.gotz@cea.fr>
D. Gotz (CEA Paris Saclay), S. Mereghetti (INAF/IASF Milano), V. Savchenko, C. Ferrigno, E. Bozzo (ISDC Versoix) on behalf of the IBAS team report:
GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 (GCN 32635) has been detected in the SPI/ACS.
It presents a multi-peaked structure with a first episode (precursor) staring at 13:16:58 UTC, peaking at 13:17:01 and lasting about 17 s.
The GRB main episode starts at t_0 = 13:19:52 UTC and includes a complex multi-peaked structure, with three main peaks lasting about 460 s.
The fluence of the main episode is about 1.3e8 counts, which, based on the average conversion factor of Vigano' & Mereghetti 2009 (https://arxiv.org/abs/0912.5329 <https://arxiv.org/abs/0912.5329>), corresponds to 0.013 erg/cmsq in the 75 keV-1 MeV energy range. This fluence value corresponds to an E_Iso of 8e53 erg (assuming a redshift z=0.151, GCN 32648).
We note that the fluence and E_Iso values are lower limits, due to the instrument saturation at the peak of the event.
The main episode if followed by a long tail with a power law time decay with index of about -1.6 and extending for at least 40 minutes after the precursor.
GCN Circular 32661
Subject
GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: Solar Orbiter STIX measurements
Date
2022-10-10T15:23:32Z (3 years ago)
From
Hualin Xiao at FHNW <hualin.xiao@fhnw.ch>
Hualin Xiao, S�m Krucker and Ryan Daniel on behalf of the STIX team report:
At 2020-10-09T13:16:56 UT (Solar Orbiter onboard time), STIX detected GRB221009A, when STIX was 1.22 AU from the earth.
The gamma-ray burst is clearly visible in the STIX quick-look light curves of five energy bands in the range between 4 -150 keV.
The initial pulse lasted about 10 seconds, followed by two bright pulses, lasting about 80 seconds.
The fourth pulse was detected at ~ 323 s after the initial pulse.
STIX recorded 185000 triggers from the burst in total.
STIX light curves can be found at: https://datacenter.stix.i4ds.net/pub/GRB/GRB221009A/stix_GRB221009A_light_curves.png
and https://datacenter.stix.i4ds.net/view/ql/lightcurves
Solar Orbiter location during the GRB: https://datacenter.stix.i4ds.net/pub/GRB/GRB221009A/GRB221009A_solar_orbiter_orbit.png
The analysis results presented above are preliminary. The science data will only be down-linked from the instrument in a month or two. Detailed analysis of the event will be started after downloading the science data.
The Solar Orbiter (SolO) is a Sun-observing satellite developed by the European Space Agency, it was launched on 10th Feb. 2020. It has a unique elliptical orbit around the sun, with distances varying from 0.3 - 1 AU. The Spectrometer Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) is one of the ten instruments onboard the Solar Orbiter. It measures X-rays emitted during solar flares in the energy range of 4 � 150 keV and takes X-ray images by using an indirect imaging technique, based on the Moir� effect. Its detectors consist of thirty-two pixelated CdTe detectors with a total effective area of 6 cm^2.
More information about STIX can be found on the STIX data center website: https://datacenter.stix.i4ds.net/
GCN Circular 32662
Subject
GRB 221009A / Swift J1913.1+1946: GIT detection of the optical afterglow
Date
2022-10-10T15:38:59Z (3 years ago)
From
Harsh Kumar at Indian Inst of Tech,Bombay <harshkosli13@gmail.com>
H. Kumar (IITB), V. Swain (IITB), G. Waratkar (IITB), K. Angail (IAO), V.
Bhalerao (IITB), G. C. Anupama(IIA), S. Barway (IIA) report on behalf of
the GIT team:
We observed Swift J1913.1+1946/GRB 221009A detected by Swift (S. Dichiara
et al., GCN #32632), Fermi (P. Veres et al., GCN #32636), INTEGRAL
(SPI-ACS) (Gotz et al., GCN #32660), and Konus-Wind (D. Svinkin et al., GCN
#32641), with 0.7m GROWTH-India Telescope (GIT). We obtained 200-sec
exposures in the g' and r' filters. We clearly detected the afterglow
candidate in our images at the position of Swift J1913.1+1946/GRB 221009A.
The photometric results follow as:
-------------------------------------------------------------------
JD (mid) | T_mid-T0(hrs) | Filter | Magnitude (AB) |
-------------------------------------------------------------------
2459862.18181 | 2.19 | g' | 17.66 +/- 0.07 |
2459862.18451 | 2.25 | r' | 16.16 +/- 0.07 |
-------------------------------------------------------------------
The results are consistent with Lipunov et al., GCN #. 32634 and 32639;
Perley GCN #32638; Broens, GCN #32640; Hu et al., GCN #32644; Belkin et
al. GCN #32645; de Wet et al. GCN #32646; Xu et al. GCN #32647; Odeh, GCN
#32649; Brivio et al. GCN # 32652. The magnitudes are calibrated against
PanSTARRS DR1 (Chambers et al., 2016) and not corrected for Galactic
extinction.
The GROWTH India Telescope (GIT) is a 70-cm telescope with a 0.7-degree
field of view, set up by the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) and the
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IITB) with funding from DST-SERB and
IUSSTF. It is located at the Indian Astronomical Observatory (Hanle),
operated by IIA. We acknowledge funding by the IITB alumni batch of 1994,
which partially supports the operations of the telescope. Telescope
technical details are available at
https://sites.google.com/view/growthindia/.
GCN Circular 32663
Subject
GRB221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: SRG/ART-XC observation
Date
2022-10-10T15:51:44Z (3 years ago)
From
Sergey Molkov at Space Research Inst., Moscow <molkov@iki.rssi.ru>
I. Lapshov, S. Molkov, I. Mereminsky, A. Semena, V. Arefiev,
A. Tkachenko, A.Lutovinov (IKI RAS)
on behalf of the SRG/ART-XC team:
At 13:19:55 UT on 09 October 2022, the Mikhail Pavlinsky ART-XC
telescope on board the SRG observatory detected a strong burst
lasting few hundred seconds. Further analysis showed that the
source of emission was out of the field
of view of the instrument and the signal passed through the
telescope structure. We associate this event with a gamma-ray burst
GRB 221009A which was detected by Swift (Kennea et al. GCN #32635),
Fermi-GBM (Veres et al. GCN #32636, Lesage et al. GCN #32642),
Fermi-LAT (Bissaldi et al. GCN #32637, Pillera et al. GCN #32658),
the IPN (Svinkin et al. GCN #32641), SPI/ACS (Gotz et al. GCN #32660).
The ART-XC event corresponds to the second (brightest) burst episode
(see e.g. GCN #32642).
Since the radiation came out of the FoV, a prompt spectral analysis
of the event is impossible, however, due to the strong attenuation of
the signal passed through the surrounding matter, we register a
light curve shape that is practically not distorted by instrumental
effects such as deadtime, pile-up or telemetry problems. The light curve
in the full ART-XC energy range has a complex multi-peak structure
with two main maxima on 60th and 340th seconds from the start. The
event duration is near of 550 seconds.
GCN Circular 32664
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): Burke-Gaffney Observatory optical observations
Date
2022-10-10T16:21:51Z (3 years ago)
From
Filipp Dmitrievich Romanov at Amateur astronomer <filipp.romanov.27.04.1997@gmail.com>
I observed the optical afterglow of the extremely bright GRB 221009A =
Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN Circ. 32632) remotely using
0.61-m f/6.5 Corrected Dall-Kirkham telescope of Burke-Gaffney
Observatory (Lane, 2018, RTSRE, 1, 119) on 2022-10-10. Twelve images
with exposures of 300 seconds and I�� filter were obtained, midtime of
the first image is 02:06:45 UTC (11h56m after the trigger), midtime of
the last image is 03:09:02 UTC (12h58m after the trigger).
I clearly detected the afterglow and measured (aperture photometry,
without deblending) following magnitudes of the afterglow from
comparison to transformed (from Lupton 2005 formula) magnitudes of
nearby stars from the Pan-STARRS DR1 catalogue (Chambers et al.,
2016):
Time (UTC)//Ic magnitude//Error
02:06:45 15.54 0.12
02:12:20 15.60 0.10
02:17:55 15.54 0.11
02:23:29 15.60 0.11
02:29:04 15.64 0.12
02:34:38 15.59 0.11
02:41:08 15.67 0.11
02:46:43 15.69 0.10
02:52:18 15.69 0.11
02:57:53 15.64 0.12
03:03:27 15.70 0.13
03:09:02 15.92 0.13
Magnitudes were not corrected for Galactic extinction.
FITS files available here:
https://observatory.smu.ca/~bgo/sm/id.php?app=0&id=20769 and
https://observatory.smu.ca/~bgo/sm/id.php?app=0&id=20770
Stacked image: https://observatory.smu.ca/~bgo/research/GRB_221009A.jpg
F. D. Romanov (AAVSO member, observer code: RFDA).
GCN Circular 32665
Subject
GRB 221009A: Upper limits from a neutrino search with IceCube
Date
2022-10-10T16:43:52Z (3 years ago)
From
Jessie Thwaites at IceCube/U Wisc-Madison <thwaites@wisc.edu>
The IceCube Collaboration (http://icecube.wisc.edu/) reports:
IceCube has performed a search for track-like muon neutrino events arriving from the direction of GRB 221009A (GCN Circular 32632<https://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/gcn3/32632.gcn3> (Swift); 32636<https://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/gcn3/32636.gcn3> (Fermi-GBM)) in a time range of -1 hour/+2 hours from the initial trigger reported by Fermi-GBM (T0=2022-10-09 13:16:59.99 UTC) during which IceCube was collecting good quality data. Zero track-like events are found coincident with the position of the GRB. We accordingly derive a time-integrated muon-neutrino flux upper limit for this source of E^2 dN/ dE = 3.9 x 10^-2 GeV cm^-2 at 90% CL, under the assumption of an E^-2 power law. 90% of events IceCube would detect from a source at this declination with an E^-2 spectrum have energies in the approximate energy range between 800 GeV and 1 PeV.
A subsequent search was performed including 2 days of data centered on the Fermi-GBM trigger (2022-10-08 13:16:59.99 UTC to 2022-10-10 13:16:59.99 UTC). In this case, we report a p-value of 1.0, consistent with background expectation. We accordingly derive a time-integrated muon-neutrino flux upper limit for this source of E^2 dN/ dE = 4.1 x 10^-2 GeV cm^-2 at 90% CL, under the assumption of an E^-2 power law.
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is a cubic-kilometer neutrino detector operating at the geographic South Pole, Antarctica. The IceCube realtime alert point of contact can
be reached at roc@icecube.wisc.edu<mailto:roc@icecube.wisc.edu>.
[1] IceCube Collaboration, R. Abbasi et al., ApJ 910 4 (2021)
GCN Circular 32667
Subject
GRB 221009A: Lulin SLT-40cm optical observations
Date
2022-10-10T20:05:50Z (3 years ago)
From
Ting-Wan Chen at MPE <janet.chen@astro.su.se>
T.-W. Chen (Stockholm), D. B. Malesani (Radboud Univ. and DAWN/NBI), S. Yang (Stockholm), W.-J. Hou, C.-C. Ngeow, Y.-C. Pan, H.-Y. Hsiao, C.-S. Lin, and J.-K. Guo (IANCU) report:
We observed the field of GRB 221009A (a.k.a. Swift J1913.1+1946; Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635; Bissaldi et al., GCN 32637; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Lesage et al., GCN 32642; Gotz et al., GCN 32660), using the SLT-40cm at Lulin Observatory, Taiwan, to obtain g,r,i,z-band images as part of the Kinder collaboration (Chen et al., AstroNote 2021-92).
Observations started at 12:25 UT on 10 of October 2022 (MJD = 59862.518), 1.04 days after the Fermi GBM trigger time. The images were combined from 2 frames with 150 sec exposure time for each band, taken under variable seeing conditions (2".5 average) and at an airmass of 1.3.
We used aperture photometry to measure the transient brightness without template subtraction, and derived the following preliminary magnitudes and 3-sigma limits (all in the AB system):
g > 18.33 mag,
r = 18.67 +/- 0.16 mag,
i = 17.38 +/- 0.09 mag, and
z = 16.60 +/- 0.09 mag.
Given magnitudes are calibrated against Pan-STARRS1 field stars and are not corrected for the expected Galactic foreground extinction corresponding to a reddening of E_(B-V) = 1.40 mag in the direction of the counterpart (Schlafly & Finkbeiner 2011).
GCN Circular 32668
Subject
Konus-Wind detection of GRB 221009A
Date
2022-10-10T20:18:09Z (3 years ago)
From
Dmitry Frederiks at Ioffe Institute <fred@mail.ioffe.ru>
D. Frederiks, A.Lysenko, A. Ridnaia, D. Svinkin,
A. Tsvetkova, M. Ulanov, and T. Cline,
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
The extraordinary bright GRB 221009A
(Fermi-GBM detection: Veres et al. GCN Circ 32636, Lesage et al. GCN Circ 32642;
Fermi-LAT detection: Bissaldi et al. GCN Circ 32637;
IPN triangulation: Svinkin et al. GCN Circ 32641;
AGILE/MCAL detection detection: Ursi et al., GCN Circ 32650)
triggered Konus-Wind (KW) at T0=47821.648 s UT (13:17:01.648).
The burst light curve starts with a FRED-like initial pulse (IP)
that lasts from ~T0-1 s to ~T0+25 s. The IP is followed by an extremely
bright multi-peaked emission in the interval from ~T0+170 s to ~T0+600 s,
where a preliminary-estimated count rate reaches several hundred counts/s.
The emission at this stage is seen up to at least ~15 MeV.
The pulsed phase of the burst evolves to a steadily decaying emission tail,
which is visible in the KW data for more than 10000 s.
The preliminary Konus-Wind light curve of this GRB is available at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB221009_T47821/
A time-averaged spectrum of the IP (measured from T0 to T0+28.842 s)
is best fit in the 20 keV - 15 MeV range by a power law with exponential
cutoff (CPL) model: dN/dE ~ (E^alpha)*exp(-E*(2+alpha)/Ep)
with alpha = -1.62(-0.04,+0.05) and Ep = 975(-332,+712) keV (chi2 = 80/98 dof).
The fluence in this time interval is estimated to (2.4 �� 0.3)x10^-05 erg/cm^2
and a 64-ms peak energy flux, measured from T0 + 5.760 s,
to (6.2 �� 0.7)x10^-6 erg/cm^2/s (both in the 20 keV - 10 MeV energy range).
A time-averaged spectrum at the onset of the brightest phase of the event
(measured from T0+180.48 to T0+200.064 s) is best fit in the 20 keV - 15 MeV range
by a GRB (Band) function with the following model parameters:
the low-energy photon index alpha = -1.09 (-0.01,+0.01),
the high energy photon index beta = -2.60 (-0.06,+0.06),
the peak energy Ep = 1060 (-30,+31) keV, chi2 = 161/97 dof.
The fluence in this time interval is estimated to (8.8 �� 0.1)x10^-04 erg/cm^2
The brightness of the main burst episode doesn't allow to perform
the standard KW spectral analysis of the emission at this stage of the event.
However, using the latter spectrum and a count rate light curve in the 80-320 keV range
with preliminary dead-time corrections applied, we obtain a rough estimate
of the fluence of the event in the interval from T0 to T0+600 s of ~0.052 erg/cm^2,
which is the highest value observed for GRBs for almost 28 years of the KW operation.
Further analysis of this extraordinary event is ongoing and
the results will be reported eslsewhere.
Assuming the redshift z=0.151 (de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 32648)
and a standard cosmology with H_0 = 67.3 km/s/Mpc, Omega_M = 0.315,
and Omega_Lambda = 0.685 (Planck Collaboration, 2014),
we estimate the burst isotropic energy release E_iso to a high,
but reasonable value of ~3.0x10^54 erg.
The rest-frame peak energy of the spectrum Ep,z is estimated to ~1150 keV.
With these preliminary values, GRB 221009A perfectly fits the
'Amati' relation for the sample of >300 long KW GRBs with known redshifts
(Tsvetkova et al., 2017; Tsvetkova et al., 2021),
see http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB221009_T47821/GRB221009A_rest_frame.pdf
All the quoted errors are at the 68% confidence level.
All the presented results are preliminary.
GCN Circular 32669
Subject
GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: Lick/Nickel telescope optical observations
Date
2022-10-10T20:34:25Z (3 years ago)
From
Weikang Zheng at UC Berkeley <weikang@berkeley.edu>
Edgar Vidal, WeiKang Zheng and Alexei V. Filippenko (UC Berkeley)
report on behalf of the KAIT GRB team:
We observed the field of GRB 221009A (=Swift J1913.1+1946; Dichiara et al.,
GCN 32632; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Bissaldi
et al.,
GCN 32637; Svinkin et al., GCN 32641; Ursi et al., GCN Circ. 32650;
Lesage et al., GCN 32642; Gotz et al., GCN 32660) with the 1-m Nickel
telescope
located at Lick observatory, California. Observations started about 15.73
hours
after the burst. Filtered B,V,R and I band images were taken with each
exposure
time of 300s. We detect the reported optical afterglow and measure its
brightness
with the following mag calibrated to the APASS catalog.
B = 20.18 +/- 0.2
V = 18.94 +/- 0.1
R = 17.59 +/- 0.1
I = 16.29 +/- 0.1
Additional images were also obtained with the 0.76-m Katzman Automatic
Imaging
Telescope (KAIT) also located at Lick Observatory. A set of clear (roughly
R)
band images were taken and the measured magnitude is consistent with the
above
Nickel R band magnitude.
GCN Circular 32670
Subject
GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: Assy optical afterglow observation
Date
2022-10-10T22:04:05Z (3 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
V. Kim (FAI), M. Krugov (FAI), A. Pozanenko (IKI), Y. Aimuratov (FAI),
S. Belkin (IKI, HSE), N. Pankov (HSE) report on behalf of GRB IKI FuN:
We observed GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632;
Kennea and Williams, GCN 32635; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Bissaldi et
al., GCN 32636; Svinkin et al., GCN 32641; Piano et al., GCN 32657;
Pillera et al., GCN 32658; Gotz et al., GCN 32660; Frederiks et al.,
GCN 32668) with AZT-20 telescope of Assy-Turgen observatory starting on
2022-10-10 (UT) 17:12:51. The observations were carried out sequentially
with three images for 30 seconds, in each filter. In stacked images we
clearly detect the optical afterglow (e.g. Dichiara et al., GCN 32632;
Lipunov et al., GCN 32634; Perley GCN 32638; Hu et al., GCN 32644;
Belkin et al., GCN 32645; Kuin et al., GCN 32656). Preliminary
photometry of the afterglow is following
Date UT start t-T0 Exp. Filter OT Err. UL(3sigma)
(mid, days) (s)
2022-10-10 17:12:51 n/a 18*30 r' 18.64 0.03 20.8
2022-10-10 17:14:51 n/a 15*30 g' 20.53 0.11 21.1
2022-10-10 17:21:07 n/a 15*30 i' 17.58 0.01 20.7
2022-10-10 17:24:16 n/a 15*30 z' 16.87 0.05 19.8
The photometry is based on the nearby PS1 stars.
GCN Circular 32671
Subject
GRB 221009A: Continued Swift/XRT observations
Date
2022-10-10T22:17:35Z (3 years ago)
From
Aaron Tohuvavohu at U Toronto <aaron.tohu@gmail.com>
A. Tohuvavohu (U. Toronto), A.P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), J.P. Osborne
(U. Leicester), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), M.G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB), E.
Ambrosi (INAF-IASFPA) , B. Sbarufatti (PSU), D.N. Burrows (PSU) and
M. Williams (PSU), report on behalf of the Swift-XRT team:
Swift XRT has continued to observe GRB 221009A from 159s to 100 ks
after the BAT trigger. The WT-mode spectrum for the afterglow was
given in GCN 32651.
The lightcurve can be best modelled as a four-component power law decay with:
Alpha_1 : 2.6 (+0.4, -0.7)
Tbreak_1: 177.4 (+2.0, -9.6)
Alpha_2 : 0.144 (+0.022, -0.026)
Tbreak_2: 610 (+84, -78)
Alpha_3 : 0.31 (+0.04, -0.03)
Tbreak_3: (4.06 [+0.23, -0.19]) �� 10^3
Alpha_4 : 1.357 (+/-0.010)
With T0 the BAT trigger time.
The results of the XRT-team automatic analysis are available at
http://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_products/01126853.
This circular is an official product of the Swift-XRT team.
GCN Circular 32676
Subject
GRB 221009A: NOEMA mm detection
Date
2022-10-11T09:09:27Z (3 years ago)
From
Antonio de Ugarte Postigo at OCA <deugarte@oca.eu>
A. de Ugarte Postigo (OCA), Michael Bremer (IRAM),
C. C. Thoene (ASU-CAS), M. Michalowski (AOI-AMU)
K. Misra (ARIES), S. Antier (OCA), D. A. Kann (Goethe
Univ.), J. F. Agui Fernandez (IAA-CSIC), L. Resmi (IIST),
S. Martin (ALMA), D. A. Perley (LJMU) and S. Schulze
(Uni. of Stockholm) report,
We observed the afterglow of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al.,
GCN 32632; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635; Bissaldi et al.,
GCN 32637; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Lesage et al., GCN
32642) with NOEMA at 90 and150 GHz starting at 16:32 UT
of the 10th of October, (27.35 hr after the Fermi GBM trigger;
Veres et al., GCN 32636). The afterglow is strongly detected
at 90 GHz with a flux of ~15 mJy. This is significantly below
the extrapolation of the data reported at lower frequencies in
previous GCNs (Bright et al. GCN 32653; Farah et al., GCN
32655), indicating that our observations are beyond the peak
Frequency, and that the earlier observations may have been
affected by a reverse shock that has already faded.
GCN Circular 32677
Subject
LHAASO observed GRB 221009A with more than 5000 VHE photons up to around 18 TeV
Date
2022-10-11T09:21:54Z (3 years ago)
From
Judith Racusin at GSFC <judith.racusin@nasa.gov>
Yong Huang, Shicong Hu, Songzhan Chen, Min Zha, Cheng Liu, Zhiguo Yao and
Zhen Cao report on behalf of the LHAASO experiment
We report the observation of GRB 221009A, which was detected by Swift (Kennea
et al. GCN #32635), Fermi-GBM (Veres et al. GCN #32636, Lesage et al. GCN #32642),
Fermi-LAT (Bissaldi et al. GCN #32637), IPN (Svinkin et al. GCN #32641) and so on.
GRB 221009A is detected by LHAASO-WCDA at energy above 500 GeV, centered at
RA = 288.3, Dec = 19.7 within 2000 seconds after T0, with the significance above
100 s.d., and is observed as well by LHAASO-KM2A with the significance about 10 s.d.,
where the energy of the highest photon reaches 18 TeV.
This represents the first detection of photons above 10 TeV from GRBs.
The LHAASO is a multi-purpose experiment for gamma-ray astronomy (in the energy
band between 10^11 and 10^15 eV) and cosmic ray measurements.
GCN Circular 32678
Subject
GRB 221009A: BlackGEM optical observations
Date
2022-10-11T09:47:33Z (3 years ago)
From
Paul Groot at Radboud University Nijmegen <p.groot@astro.ru.nl>
P.J. Groot (Radboud/UCT/SAAO), P.M. Vreeswijk (Radboud), R. Ter Horst
(NOVA), S.D. Bloemen (Radboud), P.G. Jonker (Radboud/SRON), S. de Wet
(UCT), D.B. Malesani (Radboud and DAWN/NBI), D. Pieterse (Radboud)
report on behalf of the BlackGEM consortium:
During commissioning the BlackGEM Unit Telescope 3 (BG3-Opal), located
at ESO La Silla, Chile, observed the optical counterpart of GRB221009A
(Dichiara et al., GCN 32632, Lesage et al. GCN 32642, Lipunov et al.,
32634) on 2022-10-11 in a series of 60s exposures in the q,u,z,g,i,r,q
bands. No debiasing or flatfielding was performed.
The optical counterpart is detected in q,z,i:
2022-10-11 00:47UT q = 18.98 +/- 0.09 +/- 0.05 (T0+35h30m)
2022-10-11 00:50UT z = 16.92 +/- 0.05 +/- 0.03 (T0+35h33m)
2022-10-11 00:54UT i = 17.92 +/- 0.06 +/- 0.02 (T0+35h37m),
where the first uncertainty is the statistical uncertainty and the
second is the uncertainty on the zeropoint photometric calibration. T0
is taken as the Fermi/GBM trigger time 2022-10-09 13:17UT (Lesage et
al., GCN 32642). All magnitudes are in the AB system.
BlackGEM is an array of wide-field telescopes designed, built and
operated by a consortium consisting of Radboud University, the
Netherlands Research School for Astronomy NOVA, KU Leuven, the
University of Manchester, Tel Aviv University, the Weizmann Institute,
the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the University of Potsdam, Texas
Tech University, the University of California at Davis, the Danish
Technical University and the Armagh Observatory and Planetarium.
GCN Circular 32679
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): iTelescope optical observation
Date
2022-10-11T10:03:35Z (3 years ago)
From
Filipp Dmitrievich Romanov at Amateur astronomer <filipp.romanov.27.04.1997@gmail.com>
I observed the optical afterglow of the extremely bright GRB 221009A =
Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN Circ. 32632) remotely using
telescope T24 (0.61-m f/6.5 reflector + CCD) of iTelescope.Net in
Sierra Remote Observatory (Auberry, California, USA) on 2022-10-11.
Two images (exposures 300 seconds, BINx1) were obtained with Ic
filter, midtime of the stacked image is 06:12:42 UT (1d16h02m after
the trigger).
I clearly detected the afterglow and measured (aperture photometry,
without deblending) following magnitude: 17.1 Ic +/- 0.2 from
comparison to transformed (from Lupton 2005) magnitudes of nearby
stars from the Pan-STARRS DR1 catalogue (Chambers et al., 2016).
Magnitude was not corrected for the Galactic extinction.
Stacked image available here:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/filipp-romanov/52419866941
F. D. Romanov (AAVSO member, observer code: RFDA).
GCN Circular 32680
Subject
Swift/XRT discovery of multiple dust-scattering X-ray rings around GRB 221009A
Date
2022-10-11T10:37:56Z (3 years ago)
From
Sandro Mereghetti at IASF-Milano/INAF <sandro.mereghetti@inaf.it>
Andrea Tiengo (IUSS Pavia), Fabio Pintore (INAF IASF Palermo), Sandro
Mereghetti, Ruben Salvaterra (INAF IASF Milano) on behalf of a larger
collaboration report:
Swift/XRT observed GRB221009A (GCN #32632, #32635, GCN #32636, #32637) in
PC mode three times (Obs.ID: 01126853004, 01126853005, 01126853006) between
2022-10-10 14:08:49 UT and 2022-10-11 01:22:52 UT, for a net exposure time
of 7464.5 s.
The stacked Swift/XRT image in the 0.3-10 keV energy band shows the
presence of a complex system of at least 9 bright expanding rings with
radii from about 2.5 to 7.5 arcmin. We adopted the method described in
Tiengo & Mereghetti (2006, A&A 449, 203) to derive the following distances
of the dust clouds: 179.3 +/- 0.7 pc, 290 +/- 5 pc, 406.2 +/- 0.9 pc, 467.6
+/- 1.5 pc, 554 +/- 2 pc, 714 +/- 1 pc, 1094 +/- 24 pc, 2092 +/- 22 pc and
3635 +/- 36 pc.
GCN Circular 32683
Subject
GRB 221009A: Upper limits from HAWC 8 hours after trigger
Date
2022-10-11T12:04:14Z (3 years ago)
From
Hugo Ayala at Pennsylvania State University <hgayala@psu.edu>
Hugo Ayala (PSU) reports on behalf of the HAWC
collaboration (http://www.hawc-observatory.org/collaboration)
reports observations of GRB 221009A which was detected by
Swift (Kennea et al. GCN #32635), Fermi-GBM (Veres et al. GCN #32636,
Lesage et al. GCN #32642), Fermi-LAT (Bissaldi et al. GCN #32637),
and the IPN (Svinkin et al. GCN #32641).
We use the position measured by Fermi LAT (GCN #32658), located at:
RA = 288.282, Dec = 19.495 (0.027 deg 90% containment radius)
This position started transiting over HAWC at 21:19:57 UTC on 2022/10/09
(~8 hours after the trigger time) and ended at 03:42:07 UTC on 2022/10/10.
Assuming a power law spectra with index of -2.0 we found no significant
detection in the region. We proceeded to calculate the 95% upper limit on
the flux at 1 TeV: 4.16e-12 (TeV cm2 s)^-1
HAWC is a very-high-energy gamma-ray observatory operating in Central
Mexico at latitude 19 deg. north. Operating day and night with over
95% duty cycle, HAWC has an instantaneous field of view of 3.14 sr and
surveys <5/6 of the sky every day. It is sensitive to gamma rays from
300 GeV to 100 TeV.
GCN Circular 32684
Subject
GRB 221009A: Sintez-Newton/CrAO optical observations
Date
2022-10-11T13:01:20Z (3 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
S. Belkin (IKI, HSE), S. Nazarov (CrAO), A. Pozanenko (IKI), N. Pankov
(HSE) report on behalf of IKI GRB FuN:
We observed GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632;
Kennea and Williams, GCN 32635; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Bissaldi et
al., GCN 32636; Svinkin et al., GCN 32641; Piano et al., GCN 32657;
Pillera et al., GCN 32658; Gotz et al., GCN 32660; Frederiks et al.,
GCN 32668) with Sintez-Newton 350mm f/5 telescope equipped with QHY600M
camera and g'r'i'z' filters. Observation started on 2022-10-10 (UT)
17:24:54. The series consists of images with an exposure of 120 s in
r'-filter.
In the stacked image we clearly detect the optical afterglow (e.g.
Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Lipunov et al., GCN 32634; Perley GCN 32638;
Hu et al., GCN 32644; Belkin et al., GCN 32645; Kuin et al., GCN 32656;
Kim et al., GCN 32670). Preliminary photometry of the afterglow is following
Preliminary photometry of the stacked images is following
Date UT start t-T0 Filter Exp. OT err UL(3)
(mid, days) (s)
2022-10-10 17:24:54 1.16293 r' 40*120 18.43 0.10 20.9
The photometry is based on nearby PS1 stars
GCN Circular 32685
Subject
GRB 221009A: Detection by GRBAlpha
Date
2022-10-11T13:24:38Z (3 years ago)
From
Jakub Ripa at Masaryk University <245487@mail.muni.cz>
J. Ripa (Masaryk U.), A. Pal (Konkoly Observatory), N. Werner (Masaryk
U.), M. Ohno, H. Takahashi (Hiroshima U.), L. Meszaros, B. Csak (Konkoly
Observatory), M. Dafcikova, F. Munz, N. Husarikova, J.-P. Breuer, M.
Topinka, F. Hroch (Masaryk U.), T. Urbanec, M. Kasal,�� A. Povalac (Brno
U. of Technology), J. Hudec, J. Kapus, M. Frajt (Spacemanic s.r.o), R.
Laszlo, M. Koleda (Needronix s.r.o), M. Smelko, P. Hanak, P. Lipovsky
(Technical U. of Kosice), G. Galgoczi (Wigner Research Center/Eotvos
U.), Y. Uchida, H. Poon, H. Matake (Hiroshima U.), N. Uchida
(ISAS/JAXA), T. Bozoki (Eotvos U.), G. Dalya (Eotvos U.), T. Enoto
(Kyoto U.), Zs. Frei (Eotvos U.), G. Friss (Eotvos U.), Y. Fukazawa, K.
Hirose (Hiroshima U.), S. Hisadomi (Nagoya U.), Y. Ichinohe (Rikkyo U.),
K. Kapas (Eotvos U.), L. L. Kiss (Konkoly Observatory),�� T. Mizuno
(Hiroshima U.), K. Nakazawa (Nagoya U.), H. Odaka (Univ of Tokyo), J.
Takatsy (Eotvos U.), K. Torigoe (Hiroshima U.), N. Kogiso, M. Yoneyama
(Osaka Metropolitan U.), M. Moritaki (U. Tokyo), T. Kano (U. Michigan)
-- the GRBAlpha collaboration.
The extraordinarily bright long-duration GRB 221009A (Swift/BAT
detection: Kennea et al., GCN 32635; Fermi-GBM detection: Veres et al.,
GCN 32636; Fermi-LAT detection: Pillera et al., GCN 32658; INTEGRAL
SPI/ACS detection: Gotz et al., GCN 32660; Konus-Wind detection:
Frederiks et al., GCN 32668; IPN triangulation: Svinkin et al., GCN
32641; LHAASO detection: Huang et al., GCN 32677) at a redshift of z =
0.151 (de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 32648) was detected by the GRBAlpha
1U CubeSat (Pal et al. Proc. SPIE 2020).
The GRB did not saturate our detector and the peak count rate reached
~22 000 count/s in the ~70-890 keV energy band (for a 50 cm^2 detector)
at 2022-10-09 13:20:52 UTC. The duration of the GRB was >250s. GRBAlpha
was flying above the northern polar region with elevated background
levels. The end part of the GRB was recorded while passing the outer Van
Allen radiation belt.
The light curve obtained by GRBAlpha is available here:
https://grbalpha.konkoly.hu/static/share/GRB221009A_GCN_GRBAlpha.pdf
GRBAlpha, launched on 2021 March 22, is a demonstration mission for a
future CubeSat constellation (Werner et al. Proc. SPIE 2018). Its
detector consists of a 75 x 75 x 5 mm^3 CsI(Tl) scintillator read out by
a SiPM array, covering the energy range from ~50 keV to ~1000 keV. To
increase the duty cycle and the downlink rate, we are continuously
upgrading the on-board data acquisition software stack. The ground
segment is also supported by the radio amateur community and it takes
advantage of the SatNOGS network for increased data downlink volume.
GCN Circular 32686
Subject
GRB 221009A: 10.4m GTC spectroscopic redshift confirmation
Date
2022-10-11T13:37:44Z (3 years ago)
From
Alberto J. Castro-Tirado at IAA-CSIC <ajct@iaa.es>
A. J. Castro-Tirado, R. Sanchez-Ramirez, Y.-D. Hu, M.D.
Caballero-Garcia, M. A. Castro Tirado, E. Fernandez-Garcia, I.
Perez-Garcia (IAA-CSIC), G. Lombardi (GTC, IAC), S. B. Pandey (ARIES),
J. Yang (NJU) and B.-B. Zhang (NJU) on behalf of a larger collaboration,
report:
Following the detection of the extraordinarily bright GRB 221009A
detected by Swift, Fermi, MAXI/GSC, INTEGRAL (SPI-ACS), Konus-Wind, the
IPN, AGILE/MCAL, SolO/STIX, SRG/ART-XC, CALET and GRBAlpha (Dichiara et
al. GCNC 32632, Veres et al. GCNC 32636, Bissaldi et al. GCNC 32637,
Svinkin et al. GCNC 32641, Negoro et al. ATEL 15651, Ursi et al. GCNC
32650, Xiao et al GCNC 32661, Lapshov et al. GCNC 32663, Cannady et al.
GCNC 32674, Ripa et al. GCNC 32685), we triggered the 10.4m Gran
Telescopio de Canarias (GTC) equipped with Optical System for Imaging
and low-Intermediate-Resolution Integrated Spectroscopy (OSIRIS) in La
Palma (Spain), starting on Oct 9, 22:19 UT (~9 hrs after the GBM
trigger). Spectroscopy was obtained with both the R1000B (2x900s) and
R1000R (2x300s) grisms, covering the 363-1000 nm spectral range. A red
continuum is noticeable, in agreement with earlier reports by Perley
(GCNC 32638) and Xu et al. (GCNC 32647). The GTC spectrum clearly shows
the Ca II H & K absorption doublet implying a redshift of z=0.1505,
consistent the value derived from X-shooter/VLT (de Ugarte Postigo et
al. GCNC 32648). ��With this redshift of z= 0.1505, a time-averaged peak
energy of 2.52 MeV and a total fluence of 2.6e-2 erg cm^-2, ��we found
that the main emission episode (between 174 and 700 s post trigger) of
GRB 221009A is consistent with the Type II (collapsar origin; Zhang et
al, 2007, 2009) bursts in the Ep-Eiso diagram (Amati et al. 2002).
We thank the staff at GTC for their excellent support.
GCN Circular 32688
Subject
GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946): Swift-BAT refined analysis
Date
2022-10-11T14:12:57Z (3 years ago)
From
Amy Lien at GSFC <amy.y.lien@nasa.gov>
H. A. Krimm (NSF), S. D. Barthelmy (GSFC),
S. Dichiara (PSU), S. Laha (GSFC/UMBC),
A. Y. Lien (U Tampa), C. B. Markwardt (GSFC),
D. M. Palmer (LANL), T. Parsotan (GSFC/UMBC),
T. Sakamoto (AGU), M. Stamatikos (OSU)
(i.e. the Swift-BAT team):
Using the data set from T-239 to T+1371 sec from the recent
telemetry downlink, we report further analysis of BAT GRB 221009A
(trigger #1126853 and #1126854) (Dichiara et al., GCN Circ. 32632).
The BAT ground-calculated position is
RA, Dec = 288.254, 19.809 deg which is
RA(J2000) = 19h 13m 00.9s
Dec(J2000) = +19d 48' 34.1"
with an uncertainty of 2.4 arcmin, (radius, sys+stat, 90% containment).
The partial coding was 9%.
The mask-weighted light curve shows a flat and long-lasting emission
that may have started before the burst came into the BAT FOV at T-26 s.
The burst emission seems to end at ~T+1320 s, however, we cannot rule
out the possibility that the emission extends beyond the available
event data that end at T+1371 s. The lower limit of T90 (15-350 keV)
is 1068.40 +- 13.34 sec (estimated error including systematics).
The time-averaged spectrum from T+103.3 s to T+1338.7 s sec is best fit
by a simple power-law model. The power law index of the time-averaged
spectrum is 2.08 +- 0.03. The fluence in the 15-150 keV band
is 7.4 +- 0.1 x 10^-5 erg/cm2. The 1-sec peak photon flux measured
from T+776.47 sec in the 15-150 keV band is 1.9 +- 0.3 ph/cm2/sec.
All the quoted errors are at the 90% confidence level.
The results of the batgrbproduct analysis are available at
http://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/notices_s/1126853/BA/
GCN Circular 32690
Subject
GRB 221009A: planned observation with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE)
Date
2022-10-11T15:56:24Z (3 years ago)
From
Michela Negro at CREST/NASA-GSFC/UMBC <mnegro1@umbc.edu>
Michela Negro, Alberto Manfreda and Nicola Omodei on behalf
of the IXPE Collaboration report that:
IXPE will begin observing GRB 221009A on 2022-10-11 at
23:34:28.40 UTC and will observe for 100k s.
The detailed weekly timeline for IXPE observations (which
currently includes the slew to GRB 221009A) can be found here:
https://ixpe.msfc.nasa.gov/for_scientists/weekly.html
The Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer, commonly known as IXPE
is a space observatory with three identical telescopes designed
to measure the polarization of cosmic X-rays. The observatory,
which was launched on 9 December 2021, is an international
collaboration between NASA and the Italian Space Agency (ASI).
GCN Circular 32691
Subject
GRB221009A: INTEGRAL detection of Hard X-ray emission up to 38 hours after trigger
Date
2022-10-11T16:05:23Z (3 years ago)
From
Volodymyr Savchenko at ISDC,U of Geneve <savchenk@in2p3.fr>
Volodymyr Savchenko (UNIGE, EPFL), Carlo Ferrigno, Enrico Bozzo (UNIGE),
D. Gotz (CEA Paris Saclay), S. Mereghetti (INAF/IASF Milano),�� Antonio
Martin Carrillo, Lorraine Hanlon (UCD), Elisabeth Jourdain, Jean-Pierre
Roques (IRAP), Thomas Siegert (University of W��rzburg), Erik Kuulkers,
Celia Sanchez (ESA)
Following the detection of the record-breaking GRB221009A by Swift/BAT
(GCN #32632,#32635), Fermi/GBM (GCN #32636),
INTEGRAL/SPI-ACS (GCN #32660), we have performed INTEGRAL pointed
observations of the GRB221009A location.
INTEGRAL pointed observation lasted from 2022-10-10T14:31:40 (T0 + 25.2
hours, where T0 is 2022-10-09T13:17:00) to 2022-10-11T03:18:20 (T0 +
38.0 hours) with a total exposure time of 30.2 ks (for ISGRI).
In the complete observation, the source is clearly detected in JEM-X1,
JEM-X2 (3-30 keV), and ISGRI (28 - 80 keV), with S/N of 27.8, 27.3, 15.0
respectively.
The joint JEM-X and ISGRI spectra can be satisfactorily modeled between
3 and 80 keV with a single powerlaw of slope 2.15 +/- -0.07 (90%
confidence) with a flux of 4.4e-10 +/- -2.1e-11 erg/cm2/s (3 - 80 keV).
This might indicate a single spectral component spanning from from hard
X-ray to Fermi/LAT (GCN #32658).
Combination of bright Hard X-ray afterglow with gamma-ray emission was
also found in GRB120711A (Martin-Carrillo et al. 2014 A&A 567, 84) and
GRB130427A (Kouveliotou et al. 2013 ApJ 779L, 1K)
- in fact GRB221009A appears rather similar to GRB120711A, but at 10
times smaller distance.
Within the relatively short JEM-X not ISGRI lightcurves, we do not
observe any evidence for flux decrease.
Further INTEGRAL observations are scheduled between 2022-10-11 13:52:21
and 2022-10-13 00:58:26. These observations will overlap with the
planned observation of IXPE (GCN #32690).
We are grateful to the INTEGRAL Ground Segment team for quickly
scheduling the observations.
Images and reduced data related to this publication can be found here:
https://zenodo.org/record/7186289
GCN Circular 32692
Subject
GRB 221009A: COATLI Detection of the Afterglow
Date
2022-10-11T16:41:09Z (3 years ago)
From
Alan M Watson at UNAM <alan@astro.unam.mx>
Alan M. Watson (UNAM), Nat Butler (ASU), Simone Dichiara (PSU), Rosa L.
Becerra (UNAM), Tzveti Dimitrova (ASU), Oc��lotl L��pez (UNAM), Diego
Gonz��lez (UNAM), Alexander Kutyrev (GSFC), William H. Lee (UNAM),
Margarita Pereyra (UNAM), Eleonora Troja (UTV/ASU) and report:
We observed the field of the bright GRB 220930A (Dichiara et al., GCN
Circ. 32632, Veres et al., GCN Circ. 32636) with the COATLI 50-cm
telescope and HUITZI f/8 imager at the Observatorio Astron��mico Nacional
on the Sierra de San Pedro M��rtir (http://coatli.astroscu.unam.mx) from
2022-10-11 06:05 UTC to 06:39 UTC (40.2 hours after the trigger),
obtaining a total of 405 seconds of exposure in each of the g, r, i, and
z filters.
At the position of the UVOT afterglow (Dichiara et al., GCN Circ.
32632), we detect a source with the following magnitudes and 3-sigma
upper limit:
g > 20.27
r = 19.48 +/- 0.13
i = 18.49 +/- 0.07
z = 17.92 +/- 0.08
Our photometry is calibrated against the Pan-STARRS1 catalog, is on an
approximate AB system, and is not corrected for Galactic extinction in
the direction of the GRB.
We thank the COATLI/HUITZI technical team and the staff of the
Observatorio Astron��mico Nacional.
GCN Circular 32693
Subject
GRB 221009A: LCOGT Optical Afterglow Detection
Date
2022-10-11T17:04:03Z (3 years ago)
From
Robert Strausbaugh at University of Minnesota <rstrausb@umn.edu>
R. Strausbaugh (University of Minnesota), A. Cucchiara (NASA) report on
behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed the GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632)
field with the LCOGT 1-meter Sinistro instrument at the Teide Observatory,
on Tenerife, on October 10, from 19:33 to 19:50 (corresponding to 29.38 to
29.66 hours from the GRB trigger time) with the SDSS g, r and i filters.
We performed a series of 3x100s exposures in each band. We clearly detect
the optical transient at the UVOT coordinates (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632),
in r and i bands, and marginally in g-band (2-sigma detection), consistent
with other optical detections.
The following magnitudes are calculated using the Pan-STARRS catalog as
reference:
g = 20.87 +/- 0.36
r = 18.80 +/- 0.21
i = 17.77 +/- 0.20
These magnitudes are not corrected for galactic extinction. Further
observations are planned.
GCN Circular 32694
Subject
GRB 221009A: NICER follow-up observations
Date
2022-10-11T18:41:54Z (3 years ago)
From
George A. Younes at George Washington U <gyounes@email.gwu.edu>
W. Iwakiri (Chuo U.), G. K. Jaisawal (DTU Space), G. Younes
(NASA/GSFC/GWU), Z. Wadiasingh (UMCP, NASA/GSFC), S. Guillot (IRAP/CNRS),
K. C. Gendreau (NASA/GSFC), Z. Arzoumanian (NASA/GSFC), E. C. Ferrara
(UMCP, NASA/GSFC), T. Mihara (RIKEN), D. Pasham (MIT), J. M. Miller (Univ.
of Michigan), A. Sanna (Univ. of Cagliari), C. Malacaria (ISSI), C. B.
Markwardt (NASA/GSFC)
We report on initial NICER observations of the exceptionally bright GRB
221009A, at a redshift of 0.1505 (GCN #32648, #32686) and observed from
radio to TeV energies (GCNs #32632, #32635, #32636, #32641, #32658, #32661,
#32668, #32677, and ATels #15653, #15655, #15656, #15660, #15661). NICER
observed GRB 221009A intermittently from 2022 Oct 9 17:11 to Oct 11 00:12
UT, or 14.7 ksec to 126 ksec after the Fermi/GBM trigger time (GCN #32636).
During this period, NICER made 12 observations with exposure times ranging
from 40 to 400 sec each. The initial count rate registered with NICER is
1400 counts/s which declined to about 38 counts/s at the time of the last
observation reported here. From a preliminary analysis, we find that the
decline follows a power law with an index of -1.6. The 1-10 keV spectrum of
each observation is well reproduced by an absorbed power-law model with a
spectral index of about 2.0. We used the tbabs model with wilms abundance
in XSPEC (Wilms, Allen & McCray 2000) for an assumed Galactic absorption of
5.4 x 10^21 cm^-2 (Willingale et al. 2013; GCN #32651). The average column
density of these observations with the ztbabs model is 1.1 x 10^22 cm^-2 at
a redshift of 0.151 (GCN #32648). The absorbed (unabsorbed) flux in the 0.3
- 10 keV band declined from 6.1 x 10^-9 (1.3 x 10^-8) to 1.8 x 10^-10 (3.3
x 10^-10) erg/sec/cm^2.
NICER initially received notification of the GRB through OHMAN (On-orbit
Hookup of MAXI and NICER) at 14:10:57 UT on Oct 9, but poor visibility
delayed a prompt follow-up. OHMAN is software on an International Space
Station laptop computer that provides a new automated triggering
capability, monitoring live MAXI data and communicating new transient
alerts to NICER for follow-up within minutes, visibility permitting. NICER
is continuing to monitor GRB 221009A. Detailed temporal and spectral
analysis is ongoing.
The NICER schedule can be found at
https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/nicer/schedule/nicer_sts_current.html.
NICER is a 0.2-12 keV X-ray telescope operating on the International Space
Station. The NICER mission and portions of the NICER science team
activities are funded by NASA.
GCN Circular 32695
Subject
GRB 221009A: NuSTAR Detection
Date
2022-10-11T19:38:52Z (3 years ago)
From
Ryan Chornock at UC Berkeley <chornock@berkeley.edu>
Daniel Brethauer (UC Berkeley), Brian Grefenstette (Caltech), Judith Racusin (NASA/GSFC), Raffaella Margutti (UC Berkeley), Kate D. Alexander (Arizona), Tom Barclay (NASA/GSFC), Edo Berger (Harvard), Eric Burns (LSU), Brad Cenko (NASA/GSFC), Yvette Cendes (Harvard), Ryan Chornock (UC Berkeley), Tarraneh Eftekhari (Northwestern), Jamie Kennea (PSU), and Tanmoy Laskar (Utah) report:
NuSTAR began a Target of Opportunity observation of GRB 221009A (GCN #32632) on October 11, 2022 at 03:10:07 UTC, approximately 38 hours after the GBM Trigger (GCN #32642), with an exposure of 23.4 ks (PIs Racusin and Margutti).
The 3-79 keV spectrum is well fit by a power law with a photon index of Gamma= 1.81 +/- 0.01, which is consistent with the value inferred from Swift-XRT observations acquired during the same time window. The corresponding unabsorbed flux is (3.37 +/- 0.02) e-10 erg/cm2/s (3-79 keV). Over the NuSTAR observation, the source X-ray flux declines by about 30%. However, preliminary analysis does not indicate a significant evolution of the 10-20 keV / 3-6 keV hardness ratio.
These findings are consistent with the hard X-ray afterglow observed by INTEGRAL JEM-X and ISGRI (GCN #32691) and support an absorbed simple power-law spectrum extending from soft X-ray to hard X-ray energies.
Three additional NuSTAR monitoring observations are planned and are anticipated to occur on October 15th, 20th, and November 2nd. We thank the NuSTAR SOC for promptly implementing these observations.
GCN Circular 32700
Subject
GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: eMERLIN observations
Date
2022-10-12T12:47:01Z (3 years ago)
From
Lauren Rhodes at Oxford <lauren.rhodes@physics.ox.ac.uk>
L. Rhodes, J. Bright, R. Fender (Oxford), and D.R.A. Williams (JBCA) report:
We observed the position of GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946; ATel #15650, ATel #15651) with the eMERLIN at 1.51GHz beginning at 17:55UT on 11th October for a total of 6 hours. OQ208 was used as the flux and bandpass calibrator while J1905+1943 was used as the complex gain calibrator.
We detect an unresolved source at a position consistent with the one reported in ATel #15651 with a (preliminary) flux density of ~4mJy.
We are in the process of obtaining further radio observations. We thank the e-MERLIN staff for the time allocation and their assistance with the observations.
GCN Circular 32705
Subject
GRB 221009A: COATLI Continued Monitoring of the Afterglow
Date
2022-10-12T15:23:25Z (3 years ago)
From
Alan M Watson at UNAM <alan@astro.unam.mx>
Nat Butler (ASU), Alan M. Watson (UNAM), Simone Dichiara (PSU), Rosa L.
Becerra (UNAM), Tzveti Dimitrova (ASU), Oc��lotl L��pez (UNAM), Diego
Gonz��lez (UNAM), Alexander Kutyrev (GSFC), William H. Lee (UNAM),
Margarita Pereyra (UNAM), Eleonora Troja (UTV/ASU) and report:
We observed the field of the bright GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al., GCN
Circ. 32632, Veres et al., GCN Circ. 32636) with the COATLI 50-cm
telescope and HUITZI f/8 imager at the Observatorio Astron��mico Nacional
on the Sierra de San Pedro M��rtir (http://coatli.astroscu.unam.mx) from
2022-10-12 04:00 UTC to 06:34 UTC (63.1 hours after the trigger),
obtaining a total of 7560 seconds of exposure in the i filter.
At the position of the UVOT afterglow (Dichiara et al., GCN Circ.
32632), we detect a source with the following magnitude:
i = 19.10 +/- 0.02
Our photometry is calibrated against the Pan-STARRS1 catalog, is on an
approximate AB system, and is not corrected for Galactic extinction in
the direction of the GRB.
Compared to our observations on the previous night (Watson et al., GCN
Circ. 32692), the decay has a power-law index of 1.24 +/- 0.13.
Further observations are planned.
We thank the COATLI/HUITZI technical team and the staff of the
Observatorio Astron��mico Nacional.
GCN Circular 32707
Subject
GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: SMA observations
Date
2022-10-12T18:54:52Z (3 years ago)
From
Lauren Rhodes at Oxford <lauren.rhodes@physics.ox.ac.uk>
Lauren Rhodes (University of Oxford), Kuiyun Huang (CYCU/PCCU) and Yvette Cendes (Harvard) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed the field of the candidate gamma-ray burst GRB 221009A (Swift J1913.1+1946; ATel#15650, ATel#15651) with the Submillimeter Array (SMA) at 230.7GHz beginning at 03:27UT on 12 October 2022 for a total of 3.3 hours. Uranus was used as the flux calibrator, while 3c84 was used to calibrate the bandpass response. 1925+211 and mwc349a were used as interleaved complex gain calibrators.
We detect an unresolved source at a position consistent with the UVOT position reported in ATel #15650 at a (preliminary) flux density of 9.30 +/- 0.75mJy. Further observations are planned.
We thank the staff at the SMA for carrying out these observations.
GCN Circular 32709
Subject
GRB221009A: optical afterglow measurements from Konkoly Observatory
Date
2022-10-12T22:29:55Z (3 years ago)
From
Jozsef Vinko at Konkoly Observator <vinko@konkoly.hu>
J. Vinko, A. Bodi, A. Pal, L. Kriskovics, R. Szakats, K. Vida
(Konkoly Observatory, Hungary) report:
We observed the field of the bright GRB221009A (Dichiara et al., GCN #32632, Veres et al., GCN #32636)
with the RC80 robotic telescope at Piszkesteto Station of Konkoly Observatory on 2022 Oct 10.81 UT
and Oct 12.85 UT, during inferior sky conditions. A series of 300 sec frames were collected through
Sloan r'- and i' bands. The bright optical afterglow
(Lipunov et al. GCN #32634; Perley et al. GCN #32638; Broens GCN #32640; Hu et al. GCN #32644;
Belkin et al. GCN #32645; Wet et al. GCN #32646; Xu et al. GCN #32647; de Ugarte Postigo et al.
GCN #32648; Odeh GCN #32649; Brivio et al. GCN #32652; Kuin et al. GCN #32656;
Paek et al. GCN #32659; Kumar et al. GCN #32662; Romanov GCN #32664; Odeh GCN #32666;
Chen et al. GCN #32667; Vidal et al. GCN #32669; Kim et al. GCN #32670; Groot et al. GCN #32678;
Romanov GCN #32679; Castro-Tirado et al. GCN #32686; Watson et al. GCN #32692; Strausbaugh et al.
GCN #32693; Butler et al. GCN #32705)
was clearly detected on the stacked frames with the following magnitudes, calibrated
via nearby PS1 stars:
Date UT-middle t-T0(hr) Exp(s) r'(AB-mag) i'(AB-mag)
2022-10-10 19:26:51 30.16 600 18.74 (0.12) 17.50 (0.08)
2022-10-12 20:18:24 79.02 300 20.58 (0.70) 18.74 (0.18)
These magnitudes are not corrected for galactic extinction.
GCN Circular 32727
Subject
GRB 221009A: GMG observation
Date
2022-10-13T03:01:54Z (3 years ago)
From
Jirong Mao at Yunnan Obs <jirongmao_obs@ynao.ac.cn>
J. Mao, K.-X. Lu, X.-H. Zhao, and J.-M. Bai (YNAO) report:
We observed the field of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al. GCN 32632) with the 2.4-meter optical
telescope at Gao-Mei-Gu (GMG) station of Yunnan Observatories. The observation began at
UT 14:34:40, 12, Oct. 2022, about 3 days after the trigger. We marginally detected the
afterglow. The preliminary magnitude was measured to be z~18.9. We caution that the magnitude
has a relatively large uncertainty due to the very poor seeing.
GCN Circular 32729
Subject
GRB 221009A: Sayan observatory 1.6-m telescope observations
Date
2022-10-13T07:08:22Z (3 years ago)
From
Rodion Burenin at IKI, Moscow <rodion@hea.iki.rssi.ru>
I. Zaznobin, R. Burenin (IKI), M. Eselevich (ISTP SB RAS)
report:
The field of an extraordinarily bright GRB 221009A, detected by Swift
(Kennea et al., GCN 32635), Fermi GBM (Veres et al., GCN 32636),
SRG/ART-XC (Lapshov, et al., GCN 32663), Konus-Wind (Frederiks et al.,
GCN 32668), and others, was observed with the Sayan observatory
(Mondy) 1.6-m telescope AZT-33IK, using a CCD photometer, starting at
2022/10/10 13:38 UT, i.e. approximately 24.4 hours after the burst.
The optical transient found earlier (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632,
Lipunov et al., GCN 32634, Perley et al., GCN 32638, Belkin et al.,
GCN 32645, and others), was observed in griz filters with the
following magnitudes:
g = 20.57 +- 0.08
r = 18.84 +- 0.02
i = 17.80 +- 0.02
z = 16.99 +- 0.02
The decay in OT brigtness in all filters is observed during
approximately 2 hours of our observations.
Spectra of the OT in 3700--10000A wavelength range were also obtained
using ADAM low and medium resolution spectrograph. The analysis of
these data is underway.
GCN Circular 32730
Subject
GRB 221009A: MITSuME Okayama optical observation
Date
2022-10-13T07:58:56Z (3 years ago)
From
Yuri Imai at Tokyo Inst of Tech <imai@hp.phys.titech.ac.jp>
M. Sasada, Y. Imai, K. L. Murata, R. Hosokawa, M. Niwano, I.Takahashi,
M. Tateda, N. Ito, S. Sato, N. Higuchi, Y. Yatsu, and N. Kawai (Tokyo
Tech) report on behalf of the MITSuME collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al. #32632, Kennea
et al. #32635, Veres et al. #32636, Bissaldi et al. #32637, Perley et
al. #32638, Broens et al. #32640, Svinkin et al. #32641, Lesage et al.
#32642, Karambelkar et al. #32643, Hu et al. #32644, Belkin et al.
#32645, Wet et al. #32646, Xu et al. #32647, Postigo et al. #32648,
Ursi et al. #32650, Kennea et al. #32651, Brivio et al. #32652, Bright
et al. #32653, Durbak et al. #32654, Farah et al. #32655, Piano et al.
#32657, Pillera et al. #32658, Paek et al. #32659, Gotz et al. #32660,
Xiao et al.#32661, Kumar et al. #32662, Lapshov et al. #32663, Romanov
et al. #32664, The IceCube Collaboration et al. #32665, Odeh et al.
#32666, Chen et al. #32667, Frederiks et al. #32668, Vidal et al.
#32669, Kim et al. #32670, Tohuvavohu et al. #32671, Postigo et al.
#32676, Huang et al. #32677, Groot et al. #32678, Romanov et al.
#32679, Tiengo et al. #32680, Ayala et al. #32683, Belkin et al.
#32684, Ripa et al. #32685, Castro-Tirado et al. #32686, Krimm et al.
#32688, Negro et al. #32690, Savchenko et al. #32691, Watson et
al.#32692, Strausbaugh et al. #32693, Iwakiri et al. #32694, Brethauer
et al. #32695, Rhodes et al. #32700, Butler et al. #32705, Rhodes et
al. #32707, Vinko et al. #32709, Mao et al. #32727, Zaznobin et al.
#32729) with the optical three color (g', Rc, and Ic) CCD cameras
attached to the MITSuME 50 cm telescope Okayama.
The observation with a series of 60 sec exposures started at
2022-10-09 9:51:38 UT (0.857 day after the Swift detection). We
stacked the images with good conditions. Here we report a Ic-band
magnitude by the forced-photometry at the Swift/UVOT position
(Dichiara et al. GCN Circular #32632), and the 5-sigma limits of the
stacked images in the g' and Rc bands.
T0+[day] |MID-UT | T-EXP[sec] | magnitudes of forced-photometry
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0.9320 | 2022-10-10 11:39:09| 8340 | g'>18.3, Rc>17.0, Ic=17.1+/-0.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T0+ : Elapsed time after the burst
T-EXP: Total Exposure time
We used PS1 catalog for flux calibration. The magnitudes are expressed
in the AB system. The images were processed in real-time through the
MITSuME GPU reduction pipeline (Niwano et al. 2021, PASJ, Vol.73,
Issue 1, Pages 4-24; https://github.com/MNiwano/Eclaire).
GCN Circular 32736
Subject
GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946: low-frequency ASKAP observations
Date
2022-10-13T10:48:46Z (3 years ago)
From
James Leung at U of Sydney/VAST <jleu9465@uni.sydney.edu.au>
James Leung (University of Sydney/CSIRO), Emil Lenc (CSIRO),
Tara Murphy (University of Sydney)
The Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) observed
the field of GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN
32632; Kennea & Williams., GCN 32635; Veres et al., GCN 32636) at
888 MHz on 2022 October 12 from 07:00 to 13:00 UTC (2.70 to 2.95d
after the Swift/BAT trigger).
We detect an unresolved radio source at a position consistent with
the Swift/UVOT position (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632) with a
preliminary flux density measurement of 2.2 +/- 0.1 mJy/beam.
We thank CSIRO staff for rapidly scheduling and supporting these
observations.
GCN Circular 32738
Subject
GRB221009A: LCOGT Continued Observations - Optical Upper Limits
Date
2022-10-13T16:00:24Z (3 years ago)
From
Robert Strausbaugh at University of Minnesota <rstrausb@umn.edu>
R. Strausbaugh (University of Minnesota), A. Cucchiara (NASA) report on
behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed the GRB 221009A/Swift J1913.1+1946 (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632)
field with the LCOGT 1-meter Sinistro instrument at the McDonald
Observatory, Texas, USA site, on October 13, from 03:34 to 04:18
(corresponding to 84.60 to 85.50 hours from the GRB trigger time) with the
SDSS g, r, and i filters.
We performed a series of 3x300s exposures in each band. We do not detect
the optical transient at the UVOT coordinates (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632),
in any bands.
The following upper limits are calculated using the Pan-STARRS catalog as
reference:
g > 22.3
r > 21.4
i > 20.5
These magnitudes are not corrected for galactic extinction.
GCN Circular 32739
Subject
GRB 221009A: Lowell Discovery Telescope Afterglow Detection
Date
2022-10-13T17:07:17Z (3 years ago)
From
Brendan O'Connor at UMD <oconnorb@umd.edu>
B. O'Connor (UMD/GWU), S. B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), E. Troja (UTV/ASU),
S. Dichiara (PSU), A. Kutyrev (NASA/GSFC), S. Veilleux (UMD),
J. Durbak (UMD), on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We performed target of opportunity observations of GRB 221009A
(Dichiara et al., GCN 32632, Veres et al., GCN 32636)
with the 4.3m Lowell Discovery Telescope in Happy Jack, AZ.
Observations began on October 13, 2022 at 03:09:27 UT corresponding
to ~3.6 d after the GRB. We obtained images in the griz filters at
an airmass ~1.2 with seeing ~1.2".
The afterglow is clearly detected in all filters. We obtain the
following magnitudes calibrated against the PS1 catalog:
r = 20.44 +/- 0.02 AB mag
i = 19.37 +/- 0.01 AB mag
Compared to observations at 63 hr (Watson et al., GCN 32705)
the temporal decay has a power-law index of about -0.9,
shallower than observed in X-rays.
These magnitudes are not corrected for Galactic extinction.
We thank the staff of the Lowell Observatory for assistance
with these observations.
GCN Circular 32740
Subject
GRB 221009A: MeerKAT detection
Date
2022-10-13T17:34:58Z (3 years ago)
From
Tanmoy Laskar at U of Bath <tanmoylaskar@gmail.com>
T. Laskar (University of Utah), K. D. Alexander (Arizona), E. Ayache
(Stockholm), E. Berger (Harvard), S. Bhandari (ASTRON/JIVE), J. Bright
(Oxford), R. Chornock (UC Berkeley), D. Coppejans (Warwick), H. van Eerten
(Bath), W. Fong (Northwestern), P. Groot (Radboud), R. Margutti (UC
Berkeley), C.G. Mundell (Bath), P. Schady (Bath), G. Schroeder
(Northwestern), and S. de Wet (Cape Town) report:
"We observed GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al. GCN 32632) with the MeerKAT radio
telescope array beginning on 2022 October 10 19:10 UTC (1.3 d after the
burst). Preliminary analysis reveals a radio counterpart with 1.284 GHz
flux density of ~ 2.1 mJy at position:
RA (J2000) = 19:13:03.47 +/- 0.04"
Dec (J2000) = 19:46:25.08 +/- 0.06"
This position is consistent with the optical position (Dichiara et al., GCN
32632; Lipunov et al., GCN 32634). Further observations are planned.
The MeerKAT telescope is operated by the South African Radio Astronomy
Observatory, which is a facility of the National Research Foundation, an
agency of the Department of Science and Innovation."
GCN Circular 32741
Subject
GRB 221009A: search for neutrinos with KM3NeT
Date
2022-10-13T18:57:37Z (3 years ago)
From
Damien Dornic at CPPM,France <dornic@cppm.in2p3.fr>
The KM3NeT Collaboration (https://www.km3net.org/) reports:<br><br>
Using the data from the online fast processing chain, the KM3NeT Collaboration has performed a dedicated search for track-like muon neutrino events arriving from the direction of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al. GCN 32632 (Swift); Veres et al. GCN 32636 (Fermi-GBM)). The search covers the time range of [T0-50s, T0+5000s], with T0 being the trigger time reported by Fermi-GBM (T0=2022-10-09 13:16:59.00 UTC), during which both KM3NeT detectors were collecting good quality data. However, the GRB location was above the KM3NeT horizon (mean elevation of about ~40deg) during the search time window, significantly reducing the point-like source sensitivity. In both detectors, zero events were observed in the search window, while o(0.1) were expected from the background. The online fast processing uses preliminary calibrations and detector alignment, which will be superseded in a future elaborated analysis.<br><br>
A parallel search has been performed in the MeV range (Eur.Phys.J.C 82 (2022) 4, 317) without any significant neutrino coincidence.<br><br>
KM3NeT is a large undersea (Mediterranean Sea) infrastructure hosting two neutrino detectors, sensitive to burst of supernova neutrinos in the MeV range and to astrophysical neutrinos in the GeV-PeV energy range: ARCA at high energy and ORCA at low energy. A total of 21 and 11 detection lines are currently in operation in ARCA and ORCA, respectively.
GCN Circular 32743
Subject
GRB221009A: RTT-150 optical observations
Date
2022-10-13T20:12:07Z (3 years ago)
From
Rodion Burenin at IKI, Moscow <rodion@hea.iki.rssi.ru>
Ilfan Bikmaev (KFU, AST, Kazan), Irek Khamitov (TUG, Antalya, KFU, Kazan),
Eldar Irtuganov (KFU, AST, Kazan), Mark Gorbachev (KFU, AST, Kazan),
Nail Sakhibullin (KFU, AST, Kazan), Rodion Burenin (IKI, Moscow)
report:
We have performed optical observations of the OT GRB221009A (Dichiara
et al., GCN 32632, GCNs 32635, 32636,32636, 32641, 32657, 32658,
32660, 32666, 32668, 32670, 32671, 32676, 32677, 32678, 32679, 32680,
32683, 32684, 32685, 32686, 32691, 32692, 32693, 32694, 32695, 32700,
32705, 32707, 32709, 32727, 32729, 32730, 32736, 32738, 32739) by
using 1.5-meter joint Russian-Turkish telescope (RTT-150, TUBTAK
National Observatory, Antalya, Turkey) in October 10-12, 2022. We
used TFOSC instrument for photometry in griz filters and low
resolution spectroscopy in the 3800 - 8870 A range. During 3
consecutive nights starting 27.6 hours since the trigger we make
series of images in griz with 600 sec exposures each.
We clearly see the OT in all frames. Photometric data were calibrated
using nearby PS1 star. Results of our photometry are given in the
Table.
JD T-T0 Filter mag merr
(hours)
2459863.2056537 27.653 g 20.13 0.08
2459863.2131298 27.832 r 18.65 0.02
2459863.2205018 28.009 i 17.52 0.01
2459863.2278493 28.185 z 16.81 0.01
2459863.3452805 31.004 g 20.44 0.25
2459863.3681597 31.553 r 18.81 0.05
2459863.3760363 31.742 i 17.69 0.02
2459863.3840870 31.935 z 16.99 0.01
2459864.1923863 51.334 r 19.53 0.04
2459864.2002009 51.522 i 18.40 0.02
2459864.2076914 51.702 z 17.69 0.02
2459864.2153146 51.884 g 21.15 0.21
2459864.3645166 55.465 r 19.67 0.11
2459864.3728065 55.664 i 18.49 0.04
2459864.3804310 55.847 z 17.72 0.03
2459865.2047148 75.630 i 18.82 0.03
2459865.2122502 75.811 r 20.03 0.06
2459865.2198393 75.993 z 18.20 0.04
2459865.2273203 76.173 i 19.02 0.07
2459865.2347618 76.351 r 19.97 0.08
2459865.2422699 76.531 z 18.19 0.05
2459865.2497386 76.711 i 19.09 0.10
2459865.2571590 76.889 r 20.07 0.19
2459865.2646685 77.069 z 18.40 0.08
2459865.2720521 77.246 i 18.95 0.07
2459865.2795044 77.425 r 20.32 0.17
2459865.2869724 77.604 z 18.26 0.03
2459865.2943683 77.782 i 18.93 0.04
2459865.3092743 78.140 z 18.23 0.03
2459865.3167266 78.318 i 18.93 0.04
2459865.3241129 78.496 r 20.17 0.12
2459865.3315775 78.675 z 18.23 0.04
2459865.3389639 78.852 i 18.92 0.04
2459865.3507442 79.135 r 20.26 0.16
2459865.3583217 79.317 z 18.30 0.04
2459865.3733491 79.677 r 20.24 0.19
2459865.3809028 79.859 z 18.18 0.04
Two series of low resolution (12 A) spectra were obtained in October
10, UT = 17:43 - 19:54 and in October 11, UT = 17:24 - 20:32. Their
analysis is underway.
GCN Circular 32744
Subject
GRB221009A: Detection as sudden ionospheric disturbances (SID)
Date
2022-10-13T21:42:27Z (3 years ago)
From
Doug Welch at McMaster University <welch@physics.mcmaster.ca>
P.W. Schnoor (Kiel Longwave Monitor, Germany), P. Nicholson
(Todmorden, UK), D.L. Welch (McMaster University, Canada)
A sudden disturbance of the Earth's ionosphere (SID) was observed by the
Kiel Longwave Monitor (Germany) and a VLF-Monitor at Todmorden (near
Manchester, UK) coincident with the detection of GRB221009A (SWIFT,
#32635).
This SID was seen as a sudden increase or decrease in the signal strengths
from radio transmitters below 100 kHz (19.6 to 63.9 kHz; VLF/LF) received
at Kiel and Todmorden.
These naval transmitting stations are located at France, Germany, Iceland,
Israel, Italy, Japan (Okinawa), United Kingdom and United States.
Note: This is not a radio detection of GRB221009A; this disturbance was
caused by the prompt X-rays and/or gamma-rays from GRB221009A
ionizing the upper atmosphere and modifying the radio propagation
properties of the waveguide between ground and ionosphere.
According to the SWIFT-BAT refined analysis (RA, Dec = 288.254, 19.809 deg,
GCN #32688) GRB221009A was above local horizon at both receiving sites
(2022-10-09, 13:16:59 UT).
Kiel:���������� az = 101.8, el = 32.9 deg
Todmorden: az = 94.6,�� el = 28.3 deg
Plots of the SID detection are available at the following URLs:
Kiel
https://www.qsl.net/df3lp/grb221009/KLM_grb221009a_magnitudes.png
Todmorden
http://abelian.org/vlf/grb221009a-DHO.png
http://abelian.org/vlf/grb221009a-NAA.png
http://abelian.org/vlf/grb221009a-NSY.png
The Kiel Longwave Monitor consists of a set of very low frequency radio
receivers attached to a crossed pair of loop antennas (16m^2 each),
monitoring the radio spectrum from 1.0 to 96.0 kHz at 50Hz-steps.
The VLF-monitor at Todmorden consists of a set of very low frequency radio
receivers attached to a crossed pair of loop antennas (20m^2 each) and a
vertical antenna, monitoring the radio spectrum below 100 kHz.
GCN Circular 32745
Subject
GRB221009A: Ionospheric disturbance observed in India
Date
2022-10-13T21:48:26Z (3 years ago)
From
Doug Welch at McMaster University <welch@physics.mcmaster.ca>
Authors: A. Guha (Centre for Lightning and Thunderstorm Studies (CeLTS),
Department of Physics, Tripura University, India.), P. Nicholson
(Todmorden, UK)
We report the observation of a sudden disturbance of radio propagation
in the very low frequency (VLF) band between 18kHz and 23kHz coincident with
GRB221009A. Affected were phase and amplitude of MSK ("Minimum Shift
Keying") signals from naval transmitters monitored by the Indian
Lightning Detection Network.
The GRB221009A exceeded 70 degrees elevation at all receiver sites.
https://ildn.in/gallery/ILDN-GRB221009A-VTX3.png
https://ildn.in/gallery/ILDN-GRB221009A-NWC.png
https://ildn.in/gallery/ILDN-GRB221009A-NDT.png
The Indian Lightning Detection Network (ILDN) is an experimental network
of 10 VLF receivers operated by collaborating institutions for lightning
location and observation of other VLF phenomena on the Indian subcontinent.
GCN Circular 32746
Subject
GRB 221009A: Gamma-ray Detection by SIRI-2
Date
2022-10-14T00:18:42Z (3 years ago)
From
Lee Mitchell at Naval Research Laboratory <lee.mitchell@nrl.navy.mil>
L. J. Mitchell, B. F. Phlips, (Naval Research Laboratory), W.N. Johnson (Technology Service Corporation)
The SIRI-2 gamma-ray spectrometer (Mitchell et al. 2019, Proc. SPIE 11118) detected the bright long-duration GRB 221009A detected by Swift/BAT (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632, Kennea et al., GCN 32635), Fermi-GBM (Lesage et al., GCN 32642, Veres et al., GCN 32636), Fermi-LAT (Bissaldi et al. GCN 32637, Pillera et al., GCN 32658), AGILE-MCAL (Ursi et al., GCN 32650), AGILE-GRID (Piano et al. GCN 32657), INTEGRAL SPI/ACS (Gotz et al., GCN 32660), Konus-Wind (Frederiks et al., GCN 32668), at a redshift of z = 0.151 (de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 32648; Castro-Tirado et al., GCN 32686).
The GRB was 19.9 degrees off-axis from the un-collimated instrument. With 10-second binning, the background-subtracted peak count rates in the 300-7000 keV energy range were ~65e3 count/s and ~24e3 count/s from 2022-10-09 13:20:51-13:21:11 and 13:21:11-13:21:41 UTC, respectively, coinciding with the previously-reported brightest two gamma-ray peaks. De-convolving the instrument response for the incident angle, the photon spectra for both peaks are consistent with a power law slope of -1.7 +/- 0.1.
SIRI-2 (Mitchell et al. 2019, Proc. SPIE 11118) was launched on 2021 DATE aboard the DoD Space Test Program's STPSat-6. It consists of seven hexagonal europium-doped strontium iodide (SrI2:Eu) scintillation detectors (each 3.81 cm by 3.81 cm), with a frontal area of 66 cm2, and read out by a SiPM array, covering the energy range of ~300 keV to ~7000 keV.
GCN Circular 32748
Subject
GRB 221009A: a 397.7 GeV photon observed by Fermi-LAT at 0.4 day after the GBM trigger
Date
2022-10-14T01:09:54Z (3 years ago)
From
Zi-Qing Xia at Purple Mountain Observatory <xiazq@pmo.ac.cn>
Zi-Qing Xia, Yun Wang, Qiang Yuan and Yi-Zhong Fan (Purple Mountain Observatory) report:
We have analyzed the long-term (MET: 687014224, 687139205) Fermi-LAT gamma-ray observations above 100 MeV of GRB 221009A, a burst characterized by its huge power, a low redshift as well as the highest energy photons (Kennea et al. GCN #32635, Veres et al. GCN #32636, Lesage et al. GCN #32642, Bissaldi et al. GCN #32637, Svinkin et al. GCN #32641, Huang et al. GCN #32677).
We find a 397.7 GeV photon at 0.27 degree from the LAT localization of GRB 221009A (RA = 288.282, Dec = 19.495, from Pillera et al. GCN #32658), arriving at 33554 seconds after the Fermi-GBM trigger. The location of this event is RA = 288.252, Dec = 19.763, which is close to the LHAASO localization of GRB 221009A (RA = 288.3, Dec = 19.7, from Huang et al. GCN #32677).
From a preliminary analysis, the 397.7 GeV event is found to be associated with GRB 221009A at a significance level of >3 sigma, which would be the most energetic GRB photon detected by Fermi-LAT so far (The previous records are a 99.3 GeV photon from GRB 221009A at an early time and a 95 GeV photon from GRB 130427A). Pre-GRB 221009A, just two photon events around 100 GeV had been observed by Fermi-LAT within 0.5 degree of GRB 221009A, suggesting a rather low chance coincidence probability of being a background. Furthermore, the GeV emission of GRB 221009A lasted more than one day.
The detection of such a high energy photon at t~0.4 day after the GRB trigger seems to favor the inverse compton origin rather than the synchrotron radiation (Fan et al. 2013 ApJ, 776, 95; https://arxiv.org/abs/1305.1261), which can reach very-high-energy domain in particular for the nearby luminous GRBs (Xue et al. 2009 ApJ, 703, 60; https://arxiv.org/abs/0907.4014).
GCN Circular 32749
Subject
GRB221009A: Gemini-South Optical Afterglow Detection
Date
2022-10-14T01:58:41Z (3 years ago)
From
Jillian Rastinejad at Northwestern Univ. <jillianrastinejad2024@u.northwestern.edu>
J. Rastinejad and W. Fong (Northwestern) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed the location of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al. GCN 32632) with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) mounted on Gemini-South under Program GS-2022B-DD-103 (PI: Rastinejad). We obtained 7x60-sec imaging in i-band at a mid-time of 2022 October 14 00:40:12 UT (4.437 days post-burst), at a median airmass of 1.9. We clearly detect the optical afterglow. Calibrated to Panstarrs, we measure a brightness of i ~ 19.8 AB mag at seeing < 0.8'', not corrected for Galactic extinction. This is consistent with recently reported measurements (e.g. Bikmaev et al. GCN 32743) and indicates significant fading from the i-band measurement of 15.58 +/- 0.03 AB mag reported by de Wet et al. (GCN 32646) at 0.178 days.
Further observations are planned to monitor the variability of the source. We thank Jennifer Andrews, Janice Lee, and additional Gemini staff for the rapid DDT approval, as well as the planning and execution of these observations.
GCN Circular 32750
Subject
GRB 221009A: Gemini-South Infrared Afterglow Detection
Date
2022-10-14T03:46:29Z (3 years ago)
From
Brendan O'Connor at UMD <oconnorb@umd.edu>
B. O'Connor (UMD/GWU), E. Troja (UTV/ASU), S. Dichiara (PSU),
J. Gillanders (UTV), S. B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC):
We performed target of opportunity observations of GRB 221009A
(Dichiara et al., GCN 32632, Veres et al., GCN 32636)
with the FLAMINGOS-2 spectrograph mounted on the Gemini-South
telescope. Observations began on October 13, 2022 at 23:58:42 UT
corresponding to ~4.4 d after the GRB. We obtained images in the
JHK filters with a total exposure of 60 s in each. The target
was at airmass 1.75 under seeing of ~0.7".
The afterglow is clearly detected in the JHK filters. We obtain
the following magnitudes calibrated against the 2MASS catalog:
J = 17.93 +/- 0.03 AB mag
H = 17.23 +/- 0.05 AB mag
K = 16.69 +/- 0.02 AB mag
Compared to previous nIR photometry (Brivio et al., GCN 32652,
Durbak et al. GCN 32654), our observation yields a power-law
decay with index ~ -1.4. This is steeper than reported in the
optical (O'Connor et al., GCN 32739) and consistent with that
observed in X-rays.
These magnitudes are not corrected for Galactic extinction.
Further infrared observations are planned.
We thank the staff (Janice Lee, Jennifer Andrews, and Jeong-Eun Heo)
of the Gemini Observatory for rapidly approving and scheduling
these observations.
GCN Circular 32751
Subject
GRB 221009A: HEBS detection
Date
2022-10-14T10:09:17Z (3 years ago)
From
Dong Xu at NAOC/CAS <dxu@nao.cas.cn>
J. C. Liu, Y. Q. Zhang, S. L. Xiong, C. Zheng, C. W. Wang, W. C. Xue, R.
Qiao, W. J. Tan, D. L. Zhang, X. Q. Li, X. Y. Wen, W. X. Peng, L. M.
Song, S. J. Zheng, D. Y. Guo, X. B. Li, X. Ma, Y. Huang, X. Y. Zhao, P.
Wang, J. Wang, Z. Zhang, Y. Q. Du, J. Liang, Y. Q. Lu, H. Wu, W. H. Yu,
S. Xiao, C. Cai, P. Zhang, B. Li, Z. H. An, M. Gao, K. Gong, X. J. Liu,
Y. Q. Liu, X. L. Sun, Y. B. Xu, S. Yang, P. Y. Feng, J. Z. Wang, F.
Zhang, G. Chen, F. J. Lu, S. N. Zhang (IHEP) report on behalf of GECAM
and HEBS teams:
During the commissioning phase, HEBS detected the prompt emission of the
extraordinarily bright burst GRB 221009A, which was also observed by
Fermi/GBM (Lesage et al., GCN 32642, Veres et al., GCN 32636),
Swift/BAT (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632, Kennea et al., GCN 32635)
Insight-HXMT/HE (Tan et al., Atel 15660),
Fermi/LAT (Bissaldi et al. GCN 32637, Pillera et al., GCN 32658),
AGILE/MCAL (Ursi et al., GCN 32650), AGILE/GRID (Piano et al. GCN 32657),
INTEGRAL SPI/ACS (Gotz et al., GCN 32660),
Konus-Wind (Frederiks et al., GCN 32668), SIRI-2 (Mitchell et al., GCN
32746),
and LHAASO (Huang et al., GCN 32677).
At the beginning of the burst (2022-10-09T13:17:00.050 UTC, denoted as
T0), HEBS was in the high latitude region where the in-flight triggering
of HEBS was disabled to eliminate false triggers caused by particle
background. However, one gamma-ray detector (i.e. GRD01) and one charged
particle detector (i.e. CPD02) are set to collect data normally during
this region. The full burst of GRB 221009A prompt emission was well
monitored by HEBS. The incident angle to GRD01 is about 70 deg during
the prompt emission.
Despite of the extreme brightness, the GRB 221009A main burst (T0+180s
to T0+270s) was clearly observed by HEBS without data saturation. The
dead-time is reasonable and the pulse pileup effect is negligible for
the low gain readout channel of GRD01.
The dead-time corrected light curves of HEBS could be found at:
http://twiki.ihep.ac.cn/pub/GECAM/GRBList/HEBS-GRB221009A.png
From the 50 ms light curve, we note that there are complicated spiky
structures during the main peaks. All results above are preliminary.
Refined analysis is ongoing and will be reported later.
HEBS is an all-sky monitor for gamma-ray transients in 10 keV to 5 MeV
aboard the Space advanced technology demonstration satellite (SATech-01)
satellite, which is funded and built by Chinese academic of sciences,
and was launched on July 27, 2022. Both the payload and the science
operation of HEBS are inherited from GECAM mission (made of two
mini-satellites, GECAM-A and GECAM-B), and thereafter HEBS is also
called GECAM-C.
GCN Circular 32752
Subject
GRB221009A: RTT-150 optical observations
Date
2022-10-14T11:03:17Z (3 years ago)
From
Rodion Burenin at IKI, Moscow <rodion@hea.iki.rssi.ru>
Ilfan Bikmaev (KFU, AST, Kazan), Irek Khamitov (TUG, Antalya, KFU, Kazan),
Eldar Irtuganov (KFU, AST, Kazan), Mark Gorbachev (KFU, AST, Kazan),
Nail Sakhibullin (KFU, AST, Kazan), Rodion Burenin (IKI, Moscow)
report:
We have performed additional optical observations of the OT GRB221009A
(Dichiara et al., GCN 32632, GCNs 32635, 32636,32636, 32641, 32657,
32658, 32660, 32666, 32668, 32670, 32671, 32676